175 results on '"Connell AM"'
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2. Diet and dietary variation of New Zealand hokiMacruronus novaezelandiae
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Connell, AM, primary, Dunn, MR, additional, and Forman, J, additional
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- 2010
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3. Response to commentaries on target paper, 'Growth mixture modelling in developmental psychology'.
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Connell AM and Frye AA
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- 2006
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4. Recent Advances in the Investigation of Large Bowel Diseases
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Connell Am
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Constipation ,business.industry ,Sleep in non-human animals ,Surgery ,03 medical and health sciences ,Clinical Physiology ,Diarrhea ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,medicine.symptom ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,business ,Intensive care medicine ,Flatulence - Published
- 1964
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5. Intraluminal Pressures in the Pelvic Colon
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Connell Am
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,business.industry ,medicine ,Glaucoma ,Radiology ,business ,medicine.disease ,Pelvis - Published
- 1959
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6. Motility of the pelvic colon: Part IV Abdominal pain associated with colonic hypermotility after meals
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Rowlands En, Connell Am, and Jones Fa
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Abdominal pain ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Gastroenterology ,medicine ,Motility ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Surgery - Published
- 1965
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7. OBSERVATIONS ON THE CLINICAL USE OF RADIO PILLS
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Mccall J, Connell Am, Rowlands En, and Misiewicz Jj
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Radio Waves ,General Engineering ,Gastroenterology ,General Medicine ,Articles ,Equipment and Supplies ,Pill ,medicine ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Humans ,Telemetry ,Medical physics ,Telecommunications ,business ,General Environmental Science ,Radio wave - Published
- 1963
8. Natural fiber and bowel dysfunction
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Connell, AM, primary
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- 1976
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9. Nutritional status in alcoholics with and without liver disease
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Simko, V, primary, Connell, AM, additional, and Banks, B, additional
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- 1982
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10. Measuring children's perceptions of their mother's depression: The Children's Perceptions of Others' Depression Scale-Mother Version.
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Goodman SH, Tully E, Connell AM, Hartman CL, and Huh M
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- 2011
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11. A Digital Health Model for School-Based Implementation to Improve Parent and Child Outcomes: Comparison of Active Versus Light-Touch Coaching Effects.
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Connell AM, Stormshak EA, Mauricio AM, Hails KA, Ramirez-Miranda J, and Inyangson JI
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- Humans, Child, Female, Male, Adult, Mobile Applications, Adolescent, School Health Services, COVID-19 prevention & control, COVID-19 epidemiology, Telemedicine, Digital Health, Mentoring methods, Parenting psychology, Parents education, Parents psychology
- Abstract
Online or app-based parenting interventions have become more widely available in recent years. However, challenges related to poor engagement and high attrition have been noted in the literature, and there are important questions regarding ways to enhance parental engagement and improve treatment outcomes through digital health, including through the addition of therapeutic coaches. The current study evaluated differences in the effects of active versus "light-touch" coaching implementations of an enhanced version of Family Check-Up Online (FCU-O) on parent/family and child-level outcomes from pre-treatment to 2-month follow-up assessments. The enhanced version of the FCU-O was adapted to support families in coping with pandemic-related stressors to prevent youth behavioral and emotional problems during middle school and included app-based modules designed to support effective parenting practices as well as virtual coaching. In the "active-coach" condition, parenting coaches were active in efforts to arrange coaching sessions with parents as they worked through the app-based modules, while in the light-touch intervention, parent-coaches enrolled participants in the context of a one-time support session but did not actively pursue families to schedule additional sessions. Parents in the active-coach condition exhibited greater engagement with both the app and coaching sessions than parents in the light-touch condition. Further, stronger improvements in several aspects of parenting and child functioning were observed in the active-coach versus light-touch conditions. However, parents in the light-touch condition showed reductions in stress and comparable levels of dosage when using the app. Implications for prevention and accessibility of digital health interventions are discussed., Competing Interests: Declarations Conflicts of Interest Beth Stormshak has an outside activity agreement with Northwest Prevention Science, LLC, in which she serves as the CEO and co-founder. The University of Oregon remains her primary place of employment and all research activities are attributed to the University of Oregon. She receives royalties related to the product described in this paper. Anne Marie Mauricio and Katherine Hails have outside activity agreements with Northwest Prevention Science, LLC, in which they both serve as a consultant and trainer. The University of Oregon remains their primary place of employment and all research activities are attributed to the University of Oregon. Ethical Approval This study was approved by the University of Oregon Institutional Review Board, and conducted following ethical standards outlined in the Declaration of Helsinki. Consent to Participate Informed consent was obtained from all study participants., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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12. Family Check-Up Online: Effects of a Virtual Randomized Trial on Parent Stress, Parenting, and Child Outcomes in Early Adolescence.
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Mauricio AM, Hails KA, Caruthers AS, Connell AM, and Stormshak EA
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We adapted the Family Check-Up Online (FCU-O) (1) to support families coping with pandemic-related stressors to prevent behavioral and emotional problems among middle school youth and (2) for smartphone delivery to increase access and reach during the COVID-19 pandemic. This study evaluated the direct and indirect effects of the adapted FCU-O at 4-months post-baseline. The FCU-O combines online parenting support with telephone coaching. Participants were primary caregivers of children ages 10 to 14 years. Eligibility included endorsing depression on the PHQ-2 or significant stress on a 4-item version of the Perceived Stress Scale. We randomly assigned participants to the adapted FCU-O (N = 74) or a waitlist control condition (N = 87). Participants predominantly self-identified as female (95%), 42.77 years old on average, and White (84.6%). Outcomes included caregiver reports of perceived stress and parenting, and youth conduct problems and depressive symptoms. Using a multilevel modeling approach, we tested intent-to-treat intervention effects at 4-months, with time points nested within participants. The FCU-O reduced caregiver stress and improved proactive parenting and limit setting but had no effects on youth outcomes. Effect sizes were small to moderate (Cohen's d ranged from .37 to .57). We examined indirect effects on youth outcomes at 4-months via changes in caregiver stress and parenting at 2-months. Mediation analyses suggested indirect effects on youth depressive symptoms via reductions in caregiver stress and increases in proactive parenting. Results indicate the FCU-O has potential as a public health intervention for families facing extreme stressors such as those during the COVID-19 pandemic. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05117099., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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13. Adolescent Developmental Pathways Among Depression, Conduct Problems, and Rejection: Integrative Data Analysis Across Three Samples.
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McClaine RN, Connell AM, Magee KE, Ha T, Westling E, Brown-Iannuzzi J, Stormshak E, and Shaw DS
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Objective: The current study investigated sex differences in longitudinal associations among youth depression, conduct problems, and peer rejection from ages 11 to 16. We hypothesized that girls would follow the irritable depression model, which posits that depression leads to conduct problems, and that peer rejection would mediate this relationship. We hypothesized that boys would follow the cumulative failure model, which suggests that conduct problems predict future depression, mediated by peer rejection., Method: We used integrative data analysis to combine three datasets, creating an aggregate sample of 2,322 adolescents, 58.4% of an ethnic minority group, and 51.3% boys. Using random-intercept cross-lagged panel modeling with data from ages 11-16, we conducted a nested model comparison., Results: Results indicated that a model which allowed paths to differ by sex demonstrated better model fit than a constrained model. While depression, conduct problems, and peer rejection were relatively stable over time and had correlated random intercepts, there were few crossover paths between these domains for either sex. When the strengths of individual crossover pathways were compared based on sex, only the path from conduct problems at age 13 to depression at age 14 was significantly different, with this path being stronger for girls., Conclusions: These results suggest that stable, between-person effects largely drive relationships between depression, conduct problems, and peer rejection during adolescence, whereas there are few transactional, within-person pathways between these domains. This pattern of findings demonstrates the utility of random intercept cross-lagged panel modeling for disentangling between- and within-person effects.
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- 2024
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14. Long-term Effects of the Family Check-Up on Suicidality in Childhood and Adolescence: Integrative Data Analysis of Three Randomized Trials.
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Connell AM, Seidman S, Ha T, Stormshak E, Westling E, Wilson M, and Shaw D
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- Humans, Child, Preschool, Adolescent, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Ethnicity, Suicidal Ideation, Suicide
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This study employed integrative data analysis techniques to examine the long-term effects of the family check-up (FCU) on changes in youth suicide risk using three randomized prevention trials, including one trial initiated in early childhood and two initiated in early adolescence. Data were harmonized across studies using moderated nonlinear factor analysis, and intervention effects were tested using an autoregressive latent trajectory model examining changes in suicide risk across long-term follow-up. Across trials, significant long-term effects of the FCU on reductions in suicide risk were observed, although differences between intervention and control group trajectories declined over time. No moderation of intervention effects was observed by youth gender or race/ethnicity or across samples. While results offer further support for the benefits of the FCU for suicide risk reduction, they also suggest that such effects may wane over time, underscoring the need for continued development of the FCU to enhance longer-term durability of effects on suicide-related behaviors., (© 2022. Society for Prevention Research.)
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- 2023
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15. Evaluating the Efficacy of the Family Check-Up Online to Improve Parent Mental Health and Family Functioning in Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Randomized Clinical Trial.
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Connell AM and Stormshak EA
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- Humans, Mental Health, Parents psychology, Parenting psychology, Pandemics, COVID-19 epidemiology
- Abstract
This study evaluated the effects of an enhanced version of the Family Check-Up Online (FCU-O), adapted to address parent and family functioning in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. In order to increase accessibility, the FCU-O was delivered as a web-based application coupled with online coaching support, a service delivery model that is consistent with pandemic-related limitations for in-person intervention, as well as the limited staffing and resources available in many schools and health care settings despite the increased need for mental health services driven by the pandemic. This registered clinical trial (blinded) tested the effects of the intervention on parental mental health, parenting behaviors, and family functioning from pre-treatment to 2-month follow-up. Families were randomly assigned to receive the FCU-O (N = 74) or to a wait-list control condition (N = 87). Random assignment to the FCU-O was associated with significant improvements in parental well-being, including reduced anxiety, depression, and perceived stress. Further, the FCU-O predicted significant improvements in adaptive parenting skills (e.g. less negative/coercive parenting, greater proactive parenting), and enhancements in family-relational functioning (e.g. improved coparenting). Effect sizes were small to moderate in magnitude (partial eta squared values between 0.03 and 0.11). The results indicate that online delivery of a family-centered intervention may represent a promising approach for addressing pandemic-related impacts on parent and family functioning., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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16. Effects of binge drinking and depression on cognitive-control processes during an emotional Go/No-Go task in emerging adults.
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Magee KE, McClaine R, Laurianti V, and Connell AM
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- Humans, Adult, Female, Male, Depression psychology, Emotions physiology, Alcohol Drinking, Ethanol, Cognition, Binge Drinking complications, Binge Drinking psychology
- Abstract
Introduction: The goal of the current study was to examine differences in neurocognitive processes across groups marked by binge drinking and depression to identify patterns of cognitive and affective processing impairments., Methods: Undergraduate students (N = 104; 64% female) were recruited based on self-reported symptoms of depression and alcohol use. They completed an emotional Go/No-Go task while undergoing EEG. Mean amplitudes for N2 and P3 components were examined with 2 (Depressed/Non-depressed) X 2 (Binge/Non-binge drinkers) X 4 (Happy/Sad/Angry/Calm) X 3 (Left/Middle/Right) X 2 (Go/No-Go) repeated measures ANOVAs., Results: There were significant Trial Type X Valence X Depression X Binge Drinking interactions for N2 (F(3, 80) = 6.62, p < .01) and P3 (F(3, 80) = 4.65, p < .01) components. There was a significant Valence X Depression X Binge Drinking interaction for response bias (F(3, 65) = 3.11, p < .05)., Limitations: The source of our sample may be a limitation, as all participants were university students, potentially making the results less generalizable. Further, we cannot be certain that social desirability did not interfere with honest reporting of alcohol use in this population., Conclusions: Differences in early inhibitory control were observed across emotions based on trial type among depressed non-binge drinkers, and these differences were attenuated in the presence of binge drinking. Further, the effects of depression on later inhibitory control were specific to non-binge drinkers. Results help to clarify the nature of underlying patterns of neurocognitive and affective risk processes that could be targeted by prevention and intervention programs., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors have no conflict of interest to declare., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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17. Family psychology in challenging times.
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Connell AM
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- Humans, Editorial Policies, Psychology
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In this brief article, the new editor of the Journal of Family Psychology outlines the scope and policies of the journal, and introduces the editorial team of associate editors. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2022
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18. The role of substance use coping in linking depression and alcohol use from late adolescence through early adulthood.
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Magee KE and Connell AM
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- Adaptation, Psychological, Adolescent, Adult, Alcohol Drinking, Depression, Humans, Young Adult, Depressive Disorder, Major, Substance-Related Disorders
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Although theoretical models highlight the role of coping motivations in promoting co-development of depression and alcohol use, few longitudinal studies have examined such processes across early adulthood. The current study examined the role of coping in the association between depression and alcohol use across late adolescence and early adulthood. A control sample of adolescents (N = 498) from a longitudinal prevention trial completed the Brief Symptom Inventory, Life Events Coping Inventory, and a self-report survey on alcohol use at ages 17, 22, and 23, as well as the Composite International Diagnostic Interview at age 28-30. Path analyses integrated self-report and diagnostic measures. Although gender differences were observed in mean levels of depression, alcohol use, and the use of substances to cope, we did not find gender differences in structural relations across these domains over time. Substance use coping served as an intervening pathway in the association between alcohol use and depression both at the symptom level from age 17 to 23, and in predicting longer term diagnostic outcomes at ages 28-30. Depressive symptoms in early adulthood were indirectly related to major depressive disorder (MDD) through two independent paths, including the stability of depressive symptoms over time, and through the influence of depression on increasing the tendency to use substances to cope with stress. Our results underscore that coping effects provide unique predictive power across developmental transitions, over and above the stability of depressive symptoms and alcohol use, underscoring coping motives as a promising intervention target that may prevent co-occurring depression and substance use. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2021
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19. Long-term cross-over effects of the family check-up prevention program on child and adolescent depression: Integrative data analysis of three randomized trials.
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Connell AM, Magee K, Stormshak E, Ha T, Westling E, Wilson M, and Shaw D
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- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Humans, Parenting, Parents, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Data Analysis, Depression prevention & control
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Objective: The present study examined prevention effects of the family check-up (FCU) prevention program on longitudinal changes in youth depression, using harmonized data collected across three prevention trials, including one trial initiated in early childhood and two initiated in early adolescence (total N = 2,322)., Method: Data from parent and youth reports of youth depression were harmonized using Moderated Nonlinear Factor Analysis (MNLFA), which provides a robust means to examine differential item functioning (DIF) across subgroups of participants (e.g., age groups, ethnic groups), and creates scale scores based on all available items while accounting for individual differences. Long-term intervention effects were tested using a multi-informant growth model examining changes in depression from baseline to up to 14-year postbaseline., Results: Across trials, significant long-term effects of the FCU on reductions in depression were observed, although effects were found to wane after approximately 10 years., Conclusion: FCU effects on depression across trials were attained with a relatively brief parenting program designed to reduce behavior problems and improve relational functioning that emphasized parental motivation to change while supporting positive parenting strategies. Implications of these results are discussed, along with directions for future work in this area. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2021
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20. A Single-Point Mutation in d-Arginine Dehydrogenase Unlocks a Transient Conformational State Resulting in Altered Cofactor Reactivity.
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Iyer A, Reis RAG, Gannavaram S, Momin M, Spring-Connell AM, Orozco-Gonzalez Y, Agniswamy J, Hamelberg D, Weber IT, Gozem S, Wang S, Germann MW, and Gadda G
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- Amino Acid Oxidoreductases genetics, Binding Sites, Catalysis, Catalytic Domain, Kinetics, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Mutagenesis, Site-Directed, Phenylalanine genetics, Phenylalanine metabolism, Protein Conformation, Tyrosine genetics, Tyrosine metabolism, Amino Acid Oxidoreductases chemistry, Amino Acid Oxidoreductases metabolism, Flavins metabolism, Phenylalanine chemistry, Point Mutation, Pseudomonas aeruginosa enzymology, Tyrosine chemistry
- Abstract
Proteins are inherently dynamic, and proper enzyme function relies on conformational flexibility. In this study, we demonstrated how an active site residue changes an enzyme's reactivity by modulating fluctuations between conformational states. Replacement of tyrosine 249 (Y249) with phenylalanine in the active site of the flavin-dependent d-arginine dehydrogenase yielded an enzyme with both an active yellow FAD (Y249F-y) and an inactive chemically modified green FAD, identified as 6-OH-FAD (Y249F-g) through various spectroscopic techniques. Structural investigation of Y249F-g and Y249F-y variants by comparison to the wild-type enzyme showed no differences in the overall protein structure and fold. A closer observation of the active site of the Y249F-y enzyme revealed an alternative conformation for some active site residues and the flavin cofactor. Molecular dynamics simulations probed the alternate conformations observed in the Y249F-y enzyme structure and showed that the enzyme variant with FAD samples a metastable conformational state, not available to the wild-type enzyme. Hybrid quantum/molecular mechanical calculations identified differences in flavin electronics between the wild type and the alternate conformation of the Y249F-y enzyme. The computational studies further indicated that the alternate conformation in the Y249F-y enzyme is responsible for the higher spin density at the C6 atom of flavin, which is consistent with the formation of 6-OH-FAD in the variant enzyme. The observations in this study are consistent with an alternate conformational space that results in fine-tuning the microenvironment around a versatile cofactor playing a critical role in enzyme function.
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- 2021
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21. Transdiagnostic emotion regulation processes explain how emotion-related factors affect co-occurring PTSD and MDD in relation to trauma.
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Post LM, Youngstrom E, Connell AM, Zoellner LA, and Feeny NC
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- Comorbidity, Emotions, Humans, Depressive Disorder, Major epidemiology, Emotional Regulation, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and major depressive disorder (MDD) co-occur at high rates and greater disorder severity. Studies examining the contributions of specific emotion regulation (ER) processes and negative affect (NA) to PTSD and MDD co-occurrence are scarce. This study investigated a transdiagnostic understanding of the nature of PTSD and MDD co-occurrence by examining the roles of NA, ER processes, and negative mood regulation (NMR) expectancies in PTSD and MDD in relation to trauma., Methods: Structural equation modeling was used to examine the roles of emotionality, PTSD, and MDD constructs in 200 individuals with primary PTSD., Results: ER processes fully mediated the relationships between NA and PTSD (β = .40, p < .001) and MDD (β = .48, p < .001), and NMR expectancies and PTSD (β = -.31, p < .001) and MDD (β = -.37, p < .001)., Conclusions: NA and NMR expectancies exert their effects on PTSD and MDD almost entirely through ER processes. ER appears to be a transdiagnostic process, partly accounting for the co-occurrence between PTSD and MDD. Co-occurrence models could benefit by incorporating ER processes to inform diagnostic classification and criteria and clinical intervention improved by specifically targeting ER processes., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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22. Here's looking at you, kid? Maternal depression and adolescent attention to self- or other-directed emotional faces.
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Seidman SB, Danzo S, Patton E, and Connell AM
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- Adolescent, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Emotions, Evoked Potentials, Facial Expression, Female, Humans, Male, Depression, Electroencephalography
- Abstract
Background: Maternal depression history represents a significant risk factor for developing psychopathology in children, altered emotional responding may represent a central risk pathway. However, additional research is needed on factors that affect the strength or direction of response alterations in relation to depression-risk in youth. In particular, facial orientation and gaze direction may alter personal relevance, with emotions directed towards an individual heightening motivational salience, compared to emotions directed away., Methods: Mother-daughter dyads (N = 56) were recruited based on presence or absence of maternal depression history and absence of youth depression. In line with theoretical perspectives suggesting diminished sensitivity to emotional context in relation to depression risk, we examined three Event-Related Potential (ERP) components in relation to forward versus averted emotional faces in a sample of girls with and without a maternal history of depression: the N200, N400, and Late Positive Potential (LPP)., Results: Results showed a significant maternal depression history by face-orientation effect. Low-risk girls exhibited more negative N200 and N400 amplitudes for straight (M = -3.72, SE = 0.83; M = -3.57, SE = 0.86) versus averted (M = -2.15, SE = 0.76; M = -1.68, SE = 0.81) faces, while girls of mothers with histories of depression showed undifferentiated N200 or N400 responses in relation to face orientation. For LPP amplitudes, low-risk girls exhibited significantly more positive LPP amplitudes than high-risk girls, but only for averted faces (M = 0.69, SE = 0.59 and M = -2.63, SE = 0.74, respectively)., Limitations: Cross-sectional design and limited sample., Conclusions: Results indicate that familial depression risk is associated with altered responsivity to face-orientation, these were interpreted as representing differential sensitivity to the personal-relevance of emotional stimuli., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest None., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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23. Indirect effects of the early childhood Family Check-Up on adolescent suicide risk: The mediating role of inhibitory control.
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Connell AM, Shaw D, Wilson M, Danzo S, Weaver-Krug C, Lemery-Chalfant K, and Dishion TJ
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- Adolescent, Child, Family, Female, Humans, Male, Parents education, Suicide, Attempted prevention & control, Suicide Prevention
- Abstract
This study investigates suicide risk in late childhood and early adolescence in relation to a family-centered intervention, the Family Check-Up, for problem behavior delivered in early childhood. At age 2, 731 low-income families receiving nutritional services from Women, Infants, and Children programs were randomized to the Family Check-Up intervention or to a control group. Trend-level main effects were observed on endorsement of suicide risk by parents or teachers from ages 7.5 to 14, with higher rates of suicide risk endorsement in youth in the control versus intervention condition. A significant indirect effect of intervention was also observed, with treatment-related improvements in inhibitory control across childhood predicting reductions in suicide-related risk both at age 10.5, assessed via diagnostic interviews with parents and youth, and at age 14, assessed via parent and teacher reports. Results add to the emerging body of work demonstrating long-term reductions in suicide risk related to family-focused preventive interventions, and highlight improvements in youth self-regulatory skills as an important mechanism of such reductions in risk.
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- 2019
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24. Children's appraisals of maternal depression and responses to emotional faces in early-adolescence: An Event Related Potential (ERP) study.
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Connell AM, Danzo S, Magee K, and Uhlman R
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- Adolescent, Adult, Attention physiology, Child, Electroencephalography, Emotions physiology, Evoked Potentials physiology, Female, Humans, Maternal Health, Stress, Psychological psychology, Child Behavior psychology, Depression, Postpartum psychology, Depressive Disorder psychology, Facial Expression, Mother-Child Relations psychology
- Abstract
Background: Parental depression represents a significant risk for depression development in offspring. While cognitive mechanisms represent a central risk pathway, children's appraisals of parental symptoms have been understudied. This study examined associations between children's self-blame, threat, and frequency/duration appraisals for maternal symptoms in relation to cognitive control and emotional response processes., Methods: Sixty mother-daughter (aged 10-14-years) pairs participated. Affective processing was assessed by three Event Related Potential (ERP) components, the N2, P3, and LPP, during an emotional Go/NoGo task., Results: Threat-appraisals were associated with alterations in all three ERP components, independently of maternal diagnostic histories or youth depressive symptoms. Self-blame was associated with early attentional engagement towards calm faces. Independent effects of maternal depression history and youth symptoms were also observed., Conclusions: Results highlight the importance of youth perceptions of maternal depressive symptoms in models of depression-risk., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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25. Physiological linkage and affective dynamics in dyadic interactions between adolescents and their mothers.
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McKillop HN and Connell AM
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- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Affect physiology, Child of Impaired Parents, Depression physiopathology, Depressive Disorder physiopathology, Mother-Child Relations, Mothers, Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia physiology
- Abstract
This study examined physiological linkage (specifically, linkage in respiratory sinus arrhythmia; RSA) between parents and youth (aged 11-17) across conflict and fun activity discussion tasks. We also examined whether observed, momentary negative affect or parental depressive symptoms, would moderate patterns of RSA linkage across the interaction tasks. RSA linkage was assessed using a multilevel actor-partner interdependence model (APIM). Participants were 59 mother-adolescent dyads, including mothers with or without clinically significant depressive symptoms. Both mothers and teens evidenced stable RSA over time (actor effect), although the stability of maternal RSA was moderated by maternal depression, with maternal depressive symptoms related to slower RSA return to baseline. There was a significant partner influence on youth RSA, with maternal RSA positively related to subsequent youth RSA. However, this effect was moderated by maternal depression and maternal negative affect (NA), with low maternal depression/low maternal NA related to dyadic synchrony, whereas high depression or high NA led to attenuation of this relationship. Results demonstrate the importance of understanding the dynamic and complex nature of family interactions in the context of depression., (© 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
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- 2018
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26. Exploring evidence of a dissociative subtype in PTSD: Baseline symptom structure, etiology, and treatment efficacy for those who dissociate.
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Burton MS, Feeny NC, Connell AM, and Zoellner LA
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- Adult, Anti-Anxiety Agents therapeutic use, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Dissociative Disorders psychology, Dissociative Disorders therapy, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Psychotherapy, Self Report, Sertraline therapeutic use, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic psychology, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic therapy, Treatment Outcome, Dissociative Disorders diagnosis, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic diagnosis
- Abstract
Objective: With the inclusion of a dissociative subtype, recent changes to the DSM-5 diagnosis of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) have emphasized the role of dissociation in the experience and treatment of the disorder. However, there is a lack of research exploring the clinical impact for highly dissociative groups receiving treatment for PTSD. The current study examined the presence and clinical impact of a dissociative subtype in a sample of individuals receiving treatment for chronic PTSD., Method: This study used latent transition analyses (LTA), an expanded form of latent profile analyses (LPA), to examine latent profiles of PTSD and dissociation symptoms before and after treatment for individuals (N = 200) receiving prolonged exposure (PE) or sertraline treatment for chronic PTSD., Results: The best fitting LTA model was one with a 4-class solution at both pretreatment and posttreatment. There was a latent class at pretreatment with higher levels of dissociative symptoms. However, this class was also marked by higher reexperiencing symptoms, and membership was not predicted by chronic child abuse. Further, although those in the class were less likely to transition to the responder class overall, this was not the case for exposure-based treatment specifically., Conclusion: These findings are not in line with the dissociative-subtype theoretical literature that proposes those who dissociate represent a clinically distinct group that may respond worse to exposure-based treatments for PTSD. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2018
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27. NMR Structure Determination for Oligonucleotides.
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Spring-Connell AM, Evich M, and Germann MW
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- Algorithms, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy methods, Nucleic Acid Conformation, Oligonucleotides chemistry
- Abstract
NMR spectroscopy is a versatile tool for determining the structure and dynamics of nucleic acids under solution conditions. In this unit, we provide an overview and detail of the experiments and methods used in our laboratory to determine the structure of oligonucleotides at natural abundance, thus limiting our approach to
1 H,13 C, and31 P NMR techniques. Isotopic labeling is heavily used in RNA NMR studies, however, labeling of DNA is still less common and, if modified nucleotides are investigated, is exceptionally expensive or not feasible. Each method described here is extensively documented and annotated with tips and observations to facilitate their application. Sections are devoted to sample preparation, NMR experiments and setup, resonance assignment, structure generation protocols, evaluation, tips that may be useful, and software sources. © 2018 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., (© 2018 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.)- Published
- 2018
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28. The Family Check Up and Adolescent Depression: An Examination of Treatment Responders and Non-Responders.
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Connell AM, Stormshak E, Dishion T, Fosco G, and Van Ryzin M
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- Adolescent, Conduct Disorder, Depression physiopathology, Female, Humans, Male, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Depression prevention & control, Health Promotion, Parenting
- Abstract
The Family Check Up (FCU) is a family-centered intervention for reducing children's problem behavior through improving parenting skills and family interactions. Although the FCU was designed to prevent conduct problems, we have also found the program to be effective in preventing escalating symptoms of depression in early adolescence. The current analyses examine heterogeneous patterns of response to treatment in an effort to identify factors associated with differential response to family intervention. We examined heterogeneity in trajectories of youth-reported depressive symptoms from grades 6 to 9, using a Latent Growth Mixture Modeling framework to identify patterns of treatment response and non-response. Three symptom trajectories were identified, including the following: (1) a large class exhibiting stable, low symptom levels, (2) a class exhibiting high and stable depressive symptoms, and (3) a class exhibiting low initial symptoms that increased over time. Significant intervention effects were identified only among the third class, as a preventive effect on depression from 7th to 9th grade for youth with low initial symptoms. No effect of intervention was observed in the other two classes. Comparisons of classes 2 and 3 suggested that class 3 members were more likely to be females with high baseline antisocial behavior, but lower initial levels of depression. The findings suggest the importance of exploring heterogeneity within a prevention design, as well as the importance of tailored approaches to the prevention of adolescent depression.
- Published
- 2018
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29. Effects of depression and past-year binge drinking on cognitive control processes during a flanker task in college-aged adults.
- Author
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Connell AM, Danzo S, and Dawson G
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Binge Drinking complications, Binge Drinking physiopathology, Depression complications, Depression physiopathology, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Universities, Young Adult, Binge Drinking psychology, Brain Waves physiology, Cognition physiology, Depression psychology, Students psychology
- Abstract
Background: Recent but largely separate literatures have examined neurocognitive alterations related to both depression and binge drinking, suggesting similar patterns of impairments in attention control and decisional processes. However, depression and problematic alcohol use tend to co-occur, and few studies have examined whether cognitive processing effects of depression and binge drinking are independent or interacting., Objective: The current study examined joint effects of depressive symptoms and past-year binge drinking on cognitive processing (measured via EEG assessment)., Methods: University students aged 18 and over (N = 46; 63.4% female) were recruited based on self-reported depressive symptoms and also provided reports of alcohol use (51% reported significant depression; 46% reported at-least one past-year binge-drinking episode). Participants completed a computerized flanker task, assessing cognitive control processes. Forty-one participants providing useable data were included in analyses., Results: Past-year binge drinking was associated with slower and more accurate behavioral responding. The interaction of binge-drinking and depressive symptoms was related to the magnitude of early attentional components (N1 and N2), with individuals reporting high depressive symptoms and a history of binge-drinking exhibiting attenuated early attentional engagement (e.g., less negative N1) coupled with enhanced attention control processing (e.g., more negative N2). Depressive symptoms also predicted a lack of discriminated P3 amplitudes on congruent versus incongruent trials., Conclusion: The data suggest that depression and binge drinking in the past-year jointly interact to predict early attentional processing, with the pattern of responding consistent with a compensatory response process. Results highlight the importance of future work on binge-drinking accounting for co-occurring depression.
- Published
- 2018
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30. Translation of First North American 50 and 70 cc Total Artificial Heart Virtual and Clinical Implantations: Utility of 3D Computed Tomography to Test Fit Devices.
- Author
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Ferng AS, Oliva I, Jokerst C, Avery R, Connell AM, Tran PL, Smith RG, and Khalpey Z
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Imaging, Three-Dimensional methods, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Middle Aged, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods, United States, Young Adult, Heart Failure surgery, Heart, Artificial, Prosthesis Implantation methods
- Abstract
Since the creation of SynCardia's 50 cc Total Artificial Hearts (TAHs), patients with irreversible biventricular failure now have two sizing options. Herein, a case series of three patients who have undergone successful 50 and 70 cc TAH implantation with complete closure of the chest cavity utilizing preoperative "virtual implantation" of different sized devices for surgical planning are presented. Computed tomography (CT) images were used for preoperative planning prior to TAH implantation. Three-dimensional (3D) reconstructions of preoperative chest CT images were generated and both 50 and 70 cc TAHs were virtually implanted into patients' thoracic cavities. During the simulation, the TAHs were projected over the native hearts in a similar position to the actual implantation, and the relationship between the devices and the atria, ventricles, chest wall, and diaphragm were assessed. The 3D reconstructed images and virtual modeling were used to simulate and determine for each patient if the 50 or 70 cc TAH would have a higher likelihood of successful implantation without complications. Subsequently, all three patients received clinical implants of the properly sized TAH based on virtual modeling, and their chest cavities were fully closed. This virtual implantation increases our confidence that the selected TAH will better fit within the thoracic cavity allowing for improved surgical outcome. Clinical implantation of the TAHs showed that our virtual modeling was an effective method for determining the correct fit and sizing of 50 and 70 cc TAHs., (© 2016 International Center for Artificial Organs and Transplantation and Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Associations between alcohol-use and depression symptoms in adolescence: Examining gender differences and pathways over time.
- Author
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Danzo S, Connell AM, and Stormshak EA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Analysis of Variance, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Parents, Risk Factors, Self Report, Underage Drinking statistics & numerical data, United States epidemiology, Depression epidemiology, Family Relations psychology, Peer Group, Sex Factors, Underage Drinking psychology
- Abstract
Several studies examining alcohol use and depression in youth have focused on documenting prevalence of overlap, or temporal ordering in longitudinal samples. Fewer studies have examined pathways connecting alcohol use and depression over time. This study examined gender differences between depression and alcohol use across adolescence while examining peer and family pathways as possible mediators of effects. Data was collected longitudinally from 593 families from three urban public middle schools in the United States. Participants were recruited in 6th grade and followed through 9th grade. We examined gender differences using a nested model comparison approach. Results indicated the association between depression and alcohol use differs by gender. For males, depression and alcohol use were independent across adolescence, and no significant indirect pathways were observed. For females, bidirectional effects were found between alcohol use and depression, as well as an indirect effect from depression to alcohol use via peer deviance., (Copyright © 2017 The Foundation for Professionals in Services for Adolescents. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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32. Acellular porcine heart matrices: whole organ decellularization with 3D-bioscaffold & vascular preservation.
- Author
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Ferng AS, Connell AM, Marsh KM, Qu N, Medina AO, Bajaj N, Palomares D, Iwanski J, Tran PL, Lotun K, Johnson K, and Khalpey Z
- Abstract
Regenerative medicine, particularly decellularization-recellularization methods via whole-organ tissue engineering, has been increasingly studied due to the growing donor organ shortage. Though numerous decellularization protocols exist, the ideal decellularization protocol for optimal recellularization is unclear. This study was performed to optimize existing heart decellularization protocols and compare current methods using the detergents SDS (sodium dodecyl sulfate), Triton X-100, OGP (octyl β-D-glucopyranoside), and CHAPS (3-[(3-cholamidopropyl) dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate) through retrograde aortic perfusion via aortic cannulation of a whole porcine heart. The goal of decellularization is to preserve extracellular matrix integrity and architecture, which was analyzed in this study through histology, microscopy, DNA analysis, hydroxyproline content analysis, materials analysis and angiography. Effective decellularization was determined by analyzing the tissue organization, geometry, and biological properties of the resultant extracellular matrix scaffold. Using these parameters, optimal decellularization was achieved between 90 and 120 mmHg pressure with 3% SDS as a detergent. Relevance for patients: This study provides important information about whole heart decellularization, which will ultimately contribute to heart bioengineering., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2017
33. Long-Term Effects of the Family Check-Up in Public Secondary School on Diagnosed Major Depressive Disorder in Adulthood.
- Author
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Connell AM and Dishion TJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Depressive Disorder, Major prevention & control, Female, Humans, Male, Peer Group, Risk Factors, School Health Services, Social Behavior, Young Adult, Adolescent Development, Antisocial Personality Disorder psychology, Depressive Disorder, Major diagnosis, Family Conflict
- Abstract
Given the public health importance of depression, the identification of prevention programs with long-term effects on reducing the rate of depression is of critical importance, as is the examination of factors that may moderate the magnitude of such prevention effects. This study examines the impact of the Family Check-Up, delivered in public secondary schools beginning in sixth grade, on the development of major depression in adulthood (aged 28-30). The multilevel intervention program included (a) a universal classroom-based intervention focused on problem solving and peer relationship skills, (b) the Family Check-Up (selected), a brief assessment-based intervention designed to motivate parents to improve aspects of family functioning when warranted, and (c) family management treatment (indicated), focused on improving parenting skills. Demographic (gender and ethnicity) and baseline risk factors (family conflict, academic problems, antisocial behavior, and peer deviance) were examined as possible moderators in logistic regression analyses. Intervention effects on depression were moderated by baseline family conflict and academic performance, with stronger intervention effects for youth with low grade point averages and from low-conflict families at baseline. Such findings extend the emerging literature on prevention programs with long-term effects on depression, and highlight directions for future research to enhance such effects.
- Published
- 2017
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34. The psychophysiology of parenting: Individual differences in autonomic reactivity to positive and negative mood inductions and observed parental affect during dyadic interactions with children.
- Author
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Connell AM, Dawson GC, Danzo S, and McKillop HN
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Arrhythmia, Sinus, Autonomic Nervous System physiopathology, Child, Depression physiopathology, Depression psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Parents psychology, Psychophysiology, Affect physiology, Autonomic Nervous System physiology, Individuality, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting psychology, Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia physiology
- Abstract
Parenting is a complex activity driven, in part, by parental emotional and physiological responses. However, work examining the physiological underpinnings of parenting behavior is still in its infancy, and very few studies have examined such processes beyond early childhood. The current study examines associations between Autonomic Nervous System (ANS) indices of parents' physiological reactivity to positive and negative mood states and observed parental affect during a series of discussion tasks with their adolescent child. Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia (RSA) was measured as an index of parasympathetic nervous system (PNS) activation while viewing film clips designed to induce neutral, sad, and amused mood states. Parental positive affect, anger, and distress were observed during a series of parent-child discussion tasks, which included an ambiguous discussion regarding adolescent growth, a conflict discussion, and a fun-activity planning discussion. Results supported the association between aspects of parental physiological reactivity and observed affect during dyadic interactions. Further, RSA interacted with maternal depression to predict observed positive affect, anger, and distress, although differences across tasks and specific emotions were found regarding the nature of the interaction effects. Overall, results suggest that such neurobiological processes may be particularly important predictors of parental behavior, particularly in at-risk populations. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2017
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35. Novel vs clinical organ preservation solutions: improved cardiac mitochondrial protection.
- Author
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Ferng AS, Schipper D, Connell AM, Marsh KM, Knapp S, and Khalpey Z
- Subjects
- Animals, Heart drug effects, Mitochondria, Heart metabolism, Transplants metabolism, Mitochondria, Heart drug effects, Organ Preservation methods, Organ Preservation Solutions pharmacology
- Abstract
Background: Heart transplantation remains the gold standard for end-stage heart failure, with current ex vivo organ storage times limited to 4 to 6 h before critical tissue damage occurs. Many preservation solutions exist in an attempt to limit both ischemic and reperfusion damage. In order to compare the effects of various storage solutions, mitochondrial function can be used to provide a sensitive analysis of cellular metabolic function., Methods: Experimental plates were seeded with cardiac myoblasts and kept in suspended animation for either 4 or 8 h at either 4
o or 21 °C, in Celsior®, Perfadex®, or Somah storage solutions. Cells were then reanimated for 1 h at 37 °C to simulate a reperfusion or clinical transplant scenario. Cellular bioenergetics were measured immediately thereafter to examine biochemical differences between preservation solutions and their effectiveness on preserving metabolic function., Results: The oxygen consumption rates of Somah solution were significantly higher than Celsior® and Perfadex® at 4 °C, with the exception of Perfadex® at 4o for 4 h. This effect was sustained up to 8 h. At 21 °C, oxygen consumption rates of Somah solution are significantly higher than Celsior® and Perfadex® at basal conditions after 4 h, but this effect is not sustained after 8 h., Conclusions: The purpose of this experiment was to study the efficacy of various preservation solutions on a mitochondrial level. The significantly higher oxygen consumption rates of Somah at 4 °C suggests that Somah solution may have the ability to protect cellular mitochondrial integrity, improve transplanted organ function by reducing ischemic-reperfusion injury, and thereby improve transplant outcomes. Given that Somah offers benefits over Celsior® and Perfadex® at 4 °C, it should be a target in future organ preservation solution research.- Published
- 2017
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36. Post-traumatic stress disorder and depression co-occurrence: Structural relations among disorder constructs and trait and symptom dimensions.
- Author
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Post LM, Feeny NC, Zoellner LA, and Connell AM
- Subjects
- Adult, Anxiety Disorders, Comorbidity, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Extraversion, Psychological, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neuroticism, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Risk Factors, Self Report, Socioeconomic Factors, United States, Affect, Depressive Disorder, Major diagnosis, Depressive Disorder, Major psychology, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic diagnosis, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic psychology
- Abstract
Objectives: Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and major depressive disorder (MDD) in response to trauma co-occur at high rates. A better understanding of the nature of this co-occurrence is critical to developing an accurate conceptualization of the disorders. This study examined structural relations among the PTSD and MDD constructs and trait and symptom dimensions within the framework of the integrative hierarchical model of anxiety and depression., Design: Study participants completed clinician-rated and self-report measures during a pre-treatment assessment., Methods: The sample consisted of 200 treatment-seeking individuals with a primary DSM-IV PTSD diagnosis. Structural equation modelling was used to examine the relationship between the constructs., Results: The trait negative affect/neuroticism construct had a direct effect on both PTSD and MDD. The trait positive affect/extraversion construct had a unique, negative direct effect on MDD, and PTSD had a unique, direct effect on the physical concerns symptoms construct. An alternative model with the PTSD and MDD constructs combined into an overall general traumatic stress construct produced a decrement in model fit., Conclusions: These findings provide a clearer understanding of the relationship between co-occurring PTSD and MDD as disorders with shared trait negative affect/neuroticism contributing to the overlap between them and unique trait positive affect/extraversion and physical concerns differentiating them. Therefore, PTSD and MDD in response to trauma may be best represented as two distinct, yet strongly related constructs., Practitioner Points: In assessing individuals who have been exposed to trauma, practitioners should recognize that co-occurring PTSD and MDD appears to be best represented as two distinct, yet strongly related constructs. Negative affect may be the shared vulnerability directly influencing both PTSD and MDD; however, in the presence of both PTSD and MDD, low positive affect appears to be more specifically related to MDD and fear of physical sensations to PTSD, which is information that could be used by practitioners in the determination of treatment approach. Overall, these findings are clinically relevant in that they may inform assessment, treatment planning, and ultimately diagnostic classification., (© 2015 The British Psychological Society.)
- Published
- 2016
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37. Adipose-derived human stem/stromal cells: comparative organ specific mitochondrial bioenergy profiles.
- Author
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Ferng AS, Marsh KM, Fleming JM, Conway RF, Schipper D, Bajaj N, Connell AM, Pilikian T, Johnson K, Runyan R, Black SM, Szivek JA, and Khalpey Z
- Abstract
Background: Adipose-derived stem/stromal cells (ASCs) isolated from the stromal vascular fraction are a source of mesenchymal stem cells that have been shown to be beneficial in many regenerative medicine applications. ASCs are an attractive source of stem cells in particular, due to their lack of immunogenicity. This study examines differences between mitochondrial bioenergetic profiles of ASCs isolated from adipose tissue of five peri-organ regions: pericardial, thymic, knee, shoulder, and abdomen., Results: Flow cytometry showed that the majority of each ASC population isolated from the adipose tissue of 12 donors, with an n = 3 for each tissue type, were positive for MSC markers CD90, CD73, and CD105, and negative for hematopoietic markers CD34, CD11B, CD19, and CD45. Bioenergetic profiles were obtained for ASCs with an n = 4 for each tissue type and graphed together for comparison. Mitochondrial stress tests provided the following measurements: basal respiration rate (measured as oxygen consumption rate [pmol O
2 /min], ATP production, proton leak, maximal respiration, respiratory control ratio, coupling efficiency, and non-mitochondrial respiration. Glycolytic stress tests provided the following measurements: basal glycolysis rate (measured as extracellular acidification rate [mpH/min]), glycolytic capacity, glycolytic reserve, and non-glycolytic acidification., Conclusions: The main goal of this manuscript was to provide baseline reference values for future experiments and to compare bioenergetic potentials of ASCs isolated from adipose tissue harvested from different anatomical locations. Through an investigation of mitochondrial respiration and glycolysis, it was demonstrated that bioenergetic profiles do not significantly differ by region due to depot-dependent and donor-dependent variability. Thus, although the physiological function, microenvironment and anatomical harvest site may directly affect the characteristics of ASCs isolated from different organ regions, the ultimate utility of ASCs remains independent of the anatomical harvest site.- Published
- 2016
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38. Structural Impact of Single Ribonucleotide Residues in DNA.
- Author
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Evich M, Spring-Connell AM, Storici F, and Germann MW
- Subjects
- DNA genetics, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular, Nucleic Acid Conformation, Ribonucleotides genetics, Thermodynamics, DNA chemistry, Ribonucleotides chemistry
- Abstract
Single ribonucleotide intrusions represent the most common nonstandard nucleotide type found incorporated in genomic DNA, yet little is known of their structural impact. This lesion incurs genomic instability in addition to affecting the physical properties of the DNA. To probe for structural and dynamic effects of single ribonucleotides in various sequence contexts-AxC, CxG, and GxC, where x=rG or dG-we report the structures of three single-ribonucleotide-containing DNA duplexes and the corresponding DNA controls. The lesion subtly and locally perturbs the structure asymmetrically on the 3' side of the lesion in both the riboguanosine-containing and the complementary strand of the duplex. The perturbations are mainly restricted to the sugar and phosphodiester backbone. The ribose and 3'-downstream deoxyribose units are predominately in N-type conformation; backbone torsion angles ϵ and/or ζ of the ribonucleotide or upstream deoxyribonucleotide are affected. Depending on the flanking sequences, the C2'-OH group forms hydrogen bonds with the backbone, 3'-neighboring base, and/or sugar. Interestingly, even in similar purine-rG-pyrimidine environments (A-rG-C and G-rG-C), a riboguanosine unit affects DNA in a distinct manner and manifests different hydrogen bonds, which makes generalizations difficult., (© 2016 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2016
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39. Using NMR and molecular dynamics to link structure and dynamics effects of the universal base 8-aza, 7-deaza, N8 linked adenosine analog.
- Author
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Spring-Connell AM, Evich MG, Debelak H, Seela F, and Germann MW
- Subjects
- Adenine chemistry, Adenine metabolism, Base Sequence, Carbon-13 Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Glycosides chemistry, Protons, Thermodynamics, Time Factors, Adenine analogs & derivatives, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular
- Abstract
A truly universal nucleobase enables a host of novel applications such as simplified templates for PCR primers, randomized sequencing and DNA based devices. A universal base must pair indiscriminately to each of the canonical bases with little or preferably no destabilization of the overall duplex. In reality, many candidates either destabilize the duplex or do not base pair indiscriminatingly. The novel base 8-aza-7-deazaadenine (pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidin- 4-amine) N
8 -(2'deoxyribonucleoside), a deoxyadenosine analog (UB), pairs with each of the natural DNA bases with little sequence preference. We have utilized NMR complemented with molecular dynamic calculations to characterize the structure and dynamics of a UB incorporated into a DNA duplex. The UB participates in base stacking with little to no perturbation of the local structure yet forms an unusual base pair that samples multiple conformations. These local dynamics result in the complete disappearance of a single UB proton resonance under native conditions. Accommodation of the UB is additionally stabilized via heightened backbone conformational sampling. NMR combined with various computational techniques has allowed for a comprehensive characterization of both structural and dynamic effects of the UB in a DNA duplex and underlines that the UB as a strong candidate for universal base applications., (© The Author(s) 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.)- Published
- 2016
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40. A randomized, controlled trial of the family check-up model in public secondary schools: Examining links between parent engagement and substance use progressions from early adolescence to adulthood.
- Author
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Véronneau MH, Dishion TJ, Connell AM, and Kavanagh K
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Alcoholism prevention & control, Child, Disease Progression, Female, Humans, Male, Parents, Young Adult, Family Therapy, Schools, Substance-Related Disorders prevention & control
- Abstract
Objective: Substance use in adulthood compromises work, relationships, and health. Prevention strategies in early adolescence are designed to reduce substance use and progressions to problematic use by adulthood. This report examines the long-term effects of offering Family Check-up (FCU) at multiple time points in secondary education on the progression of substance use from age 11 to 23 years., Method: Participants (N = 998; 472 females) were randomly assigned individuals to intervention or control in Grade 6 and offered a multilevel intervention that included a classroom-based intervention (universal), the FCU (selected), and tailored family management treatment (indicated). Among intervention families, 23% engaged in the selected and indicated levels during middle school., Results: Intention to treat analyses revealed that randomization to the FCU was associated with reduced growth in marijuana use (p < .05), but not alcohol and tobacco use. We also examined whether engagement in the voluntary FCU services moderated the effect of the intervention on substance use progressions using complier average causal effect (CACE) modeling, and found that engagement in the FCU services predicted reductions in alcohol, tobacco, and marijuana use by age 23. In comparing engagers with nonengagers: 70% versus 95% showed signs of alcohol abuse or dependence, 28% versus 61% showed signs of tobacco dependence, and 59% versus 84% showed signs of marijuana abuse or dependence., Conclusion: Family interventions that are embedded within public school systems can reach high-risk students and families and prevent progressions from exploration to problematic substance use through early adulthood. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2016
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41. Long-Term Effects of the Family Check-Up in Early Adolescence on Risk of Suicide in Early Adulthood.
- Author
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Connell AM, McKillop HN, and Dishion TJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Risk, Schools, Time, Young Adult, Family, School Health Services, Suicide Prevention
- Abstract
The impact of the Family Check-Up (FCU), a school-based prevention program, as delivered in public secondary schools on suicide risk across adolescence, was examined. Students were randomly assigned to a family-centered intervention (N = 998) in the sixth grade and offered a multilevel intervention that included (1) a universal classroom-based intervention, (2) the FCU (Dishion, Stormshak, & Kavanagh, 2011), and (3) family management treatment. Engagement with the FCU predicted significant reductions in suicide risk across adolescence and early adulthood., (© 2016 The American Association of Suicidology.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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42. Preventing adolescent depression with the family check-up: Examining family conflict as a mechanism of change.
- Author
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Fosco GM, Van Ryzin MJ, Connell AM, and Stormshak EA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Depression psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Models, Psychological, Multilevel Analysis, Program Evaluation, Urban Population, Depression prevention & control, Family Conflict psychology, Family Therapy, School Health Services
- Abstract
Family-centered prevention programs are understudied for their effects on adolescent depression, despite considerable evidence that supports their effectiveness for preventing escalation in youth problem behavior and substance use. This study was conducted with 2 overarching goals: (a) replicate previous work that has implicated the Family Check-Up (FCU), a multilevel, gated intervention model embedded in public middle schools, as an effective strategy for preventing growth in adolescent depressive symptoms and (b) test whether changes in family conflict may be an explanatory mechanism for the long-term, protective effects of the FCU with respect to adolescent depression. This trial was conducted with 593 ethnically diverse families who were randomized to intervention (offered the FCU) or middle school as usual. Complier average causal effect (CACE) analysis revealed that engagers in the FCU evidenced less growth in depressive symptoms and family conflict from 6th through 9th grade, and post hoc analyses indicated that the FCU is related to lower rates of major depressive disorder. The second set of analyses examined family conflict as a mechanism of change for families who participated in the FCU. Families who reported short-term intervention benefits had significantly less escalation in family conflict over the middle school years; in turn, growth in family conflict explained risk for adolescent depressive symptoms., ((c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2016
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43. Binge drinking, depression, and electrocortical responses to emotional images.
- Author
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Connell AM, Patton E, and McKillop H
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Alcohol Drinking psychology, Alcoholism physiopathology, Alcoholism psychology, Anxiety psychology, Attention physiology, Binge Drinking physiopathology, Depression physiopathology, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Male, Motivation physiology, Photic Stimulation, Young Adult, Binge Drinking psychology, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Depression psychology, Emotions physiology, Event-Related Potentials, P300 physiology
- Abstract
Binge drinking and depression are highly prevalent, associated with cognitive and affective impairments, and frequently co-occur. Yet little research has examined their joint relations with such processing impairment. The current study examines the relation between symptoms of depression, binge drinking, and the magnitude of early (early posterior negativity, EPN) and later (P3 and late positive potential, LPP) visual processing components of affectively negative, positive, and neutral visual stimuli. Participants included 42 undergraduate students recruited on the basis of depressive symptoms. Results of repeated measures analyses of variance (ANOVAs; Depression × Binge × Emotion × Laterality) showed that binge drinkers exhibited lower LPP amplitudes for negative images, compared with nonbinge drinkers, regardless of depression, consistent with motivational models of alcohol abuse. Otherwise, differences across depressed and nondepressed groups were largest among binge drinkers, including a pattern of stronger early attentional engagement (EPN) to negative and neutral images, but decreased later processing (P3 and LPP) across all emotional categories, consistent with a vigilance-avoidance response pattern., ((c) 2015 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2015
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44. Do specific transitional patterns of antisocial behavior during adolescence increase risk for problems in young adulthood?
- Author
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Cook EC, Pflieger JC, Connell AM, and Connell CM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Alcohol Drinking psychology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Odds Ratio, Risk, Risk Factors, Sex Factors, Young Adult, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Aggression psychology, Antisocial Personality Disorder psychology, Crime psychology
- Abstract
Latent transition analysis was used to identify patterns and trajectories of antisocial behavior (ASB) and their association with young adult outcomes in a nationally representative sample of adolescents (N = 5,422; 53.9% female). Participants were on average 13.96 years of age (SD = 1.06) at wave 1 of the study. Latent class analysis identified four classes of ASB including a non-ASB class, an aggressive class, a petty theft class, and a serious ASB class. In general, youth who were classified as serious stable ASB were the most at risk for problematic functioning in young adulthood. Youth who escalated to more serious patterns of ASB or reduced involvement also were at greater risk of negative outcomes in young adulthood compared to stable non-ASB youth, although they generally fared better than youth involved in stable patterns of more serious ASB. Gender differences indicated that involvement in ASB was a greater risk factor for alcohol use among boys and a greater risk factor for depression among girls in young adulthood. Results are discussed in terms of the predictive validity of classes of ASB to functioning in young adulthood and the implications of this research for prevention efforts.
- Published
- 2015
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45. Attention bias in youth: associations with youth and mother's depressive symptoms moderated by emotion regulation and affective dynamics during family interactions.
- Author
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Connell AM, Patton E, Klostermann S, and Hughes-Scalise A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Facial Expression, Female, Humans, Male, Affect, Attention, Depression psychology, Mother-Child Relations psychology
- Abstract
Recent research has highlighted the potential role of attention bias for emotional stimuli as a possible cognitive risk factor for depression in youth. However, differences in youth emotion regulation or maternal affect may moderate the association between maternal and youth depression and youth attention biases. The current study investigated the relationship between maternal and youth depressive symptoms and youth (aged 11-17 years) attention bias for sad and happy faces in 59 mother-youth dyads, examining whether positive and negative maternal affect observed during structured interaction tasks or youth emotion regulation tendencies moderated associations between maternal and youth depression and attention biases. Youth suppression interacted with maternal and youth depression to predict sad attentional biases in youth, while maternal positive affect interacted with maternal depression to predict happy attention biases in youth.
- Published
- 2013
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46. Family Check Up effects on adolescent arrest trajectories: Variation by developmental subtype.
- Author
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Connell AM, Dishion TJ, and Klostermann S
- Abstract
This study examines the effect of the Family Check Up intervention on the probability of arrests from ages 12 to 17 years for youth following heterogeneous developmental trajectories of antisocial behavior. Latent Growth Mixture Modeling results supported the presence of three developmental trajectories of arrests, including a large group of youth with few police contacts, a smaller group of youth showing early onset and chronic arrests, and a group with adolescent-onset arrests. In line with hypotheses, effects of intervention were seen within the adolescent-onset group, but not in the early onset chronic arrest trajectory group, or those youth with little police contact. The trajectory groups were differentiated by peer, family, behavioral and academic risk variables at age 11.
- Published
- 2012
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47. Maternal depression and the heart of parenting: respiratory sinus arrhythmia and affective dynamics during parent-adolescent interactions.
- Author
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Connell AM, Hughes-Scalise A, Klostermann S, and Azem T
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Depression complications, Depression physiopathology, Female, Humans, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Adolescent Development, Affect physiology, Arrhythmia, Sinus etiology, Depression psychology, Mothers psychology, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting psychology, Respiratory Mechanics physiology
- Abstract
Maternal depression is associated with problematic parenting and the development of emotional and behavior problems in children and adolescents. While emotional regulatory abilities are likely to influence emotional exchanges between parents and teens, surprisingly little is known about the role of emotion regulation during parent-child interactions, particularly in high-risk families. Respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) has been widely linked to emotion regulatory abilities in recent research, and the current study investigated RSA and maternal depression in relation to dyadic flexibility, as well as mutuality of negative and positive affect displayed during three discussion tasks between 59 mother-adolescent pairs (age 11-17 years). Dyadic flexibility was predicted by the interaction of maternal depression, maternal RSA, and teen RSA, with higher maternal RSA predicting greater dyadic flexibility, particularly in highest risk dyads (i.e., elevated maternal depression and lower teen RSA). Teen RSA interacted with maternal depression to predict mutual negative affect, serving as a protective factor. Finally, maternal and teen RSA interacted to predict mutual positive affect, with maternal RSA buffering against low teen RSA to predict higher mutual positive affect. Results support the role of RSA in affectively laden interactions between parents and adolescents, particularly in the face of maternal depression.
- Published
- 2011
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48. Maternal depression and child psychopathology: a meta-analytic review.
- Author
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Goodman SH, Rouse MH, Connell AM, Broth MR, Hall CM, and Heyward D
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Affect, Age Factors, Child, Child Behavior, Child Development, Child of Impaired Parents psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Mother-Child Relations, Young Adult, Depressive Disorder psychology, Mothers psychology, Psychology, Child
- Abstract
Although the association between maternal depression and adverse child outcomes is well established, the strength of the association, the breadth or specificity of the outcomes, and the role of moderators are not known. This information is essential to inform not only models of risk but also the design of preventive interventions by helping to identify subgroups at greater risk than others and to elucidate potential mechanisms as targets of interventions. A meta-analysis of 193 studies was conducted to examine the strength of the association between mothers' depression and children's behavioral problems or emotional functioning. Maternal depression was significantly related to higher levels of internalizing, externalizing, and general psychopathology and negative affect/behavior and to lower levels of positive affect/behavior, with all associations small in magnitude. These associations were significantly moderated by theoretically and methodologically relevant variables, with patterns of moderation found to vary somewhat with each child outcome. Results are interpreted in terms of implications for theoretical models that move beyond main effects models in order to more accurately identify which children of depressed mothers are more or less at risk for specific outcomes.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. An ecological approach to promoting early adolescent mental health and social adaptation: family-centered intervention in public middle schools.
- Author
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Stormshak EA, Connell AM, Véronneau MH, Myers MW, Dishion TJ, Kavanagh K, and Caruthers AS
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Alcoholism ethnology, Alcoholism psychology, Antisocial Personality Disorder ethnology, Antisocial Personality Disorder psychology, Ethnicity psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Motivation, Oregon, Sex Factors, Substance-Related Disorders ethnology, Substance-Related Disorders psychology, Urban Population, Alcoholism prevention & control, Antisocial Personality Disorder prevention & control, Family Therapy methods, Health Promotion methods, School Health Services, Social Adjustment, Social Environment, Substance-Related Disorders prevention & control
- Abstract
This study examined the impact of the Family Check-Up (FCU) and linked intervention services on reducing health-risk behaviors and promoting social adaptation among middle school youth. A total of 593 students and their families were randomly assigned to receive either the intervention or middle school services as usual. Forty-two percent of intervention families engaged in the service and received the FCU. Using complier average causal effect analyses, engagement in the intervention moderated intervention outcomes. Families who engaged in the intervention had youth who reported lower rates of antisocial behavior and substance use over time than did a matched control sample. Results extend previous research indicating that a family-centered approach to supporting youth in the public school setting reduced the growth of antisocial behavior, alcohol use, tobacco use, and marijuana use throughout the middle school years., (© 2011 The Authors. Child Development © 2011 Society for Research in Child Development, Inc.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Diet of two large sympatric teleosts, the ling (Genypterus blacodes) and hake (Merluccius australis).
- Author
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Dunn MR, Connell AM, Forman J, Stevens DW, and Horn PL
- Subjects
- Animals, Models, Theoretical, Species Specificity, Diet, Feeding Behavior, Fishes physiology
- Abstract
Ling and hake are tertiary consumers, and as a result both may have an important structuring role in marine communities. The diets of 2064 ling and 913 hake from Chatham Rise, New Zealand, were determined from examination of stomach contents. Ling was a benthic generalist, and hake a demersal piscivore. The diet of ling was characterised by benthic crustaceans, mainly Munida gracilis and Metanephrops challengeri, and demersal fishes, mainly Macrourids and scavenged offal from fishing vessels. The diet of hake was characterised by teleost fishes, mainly macrourids and merlucciids. Multivariate analyses using distance-based linear models found the most important predictors of diet variability were depth, fish length, and vessel type (whether the sample was collected from a commercial or research vessel) for ling, and fish length and vessel type for hake. There was no interspecific predation between ling and hake, and resource competition was largely restricted to macrourid prey, although the dominant macrourid species predated by ling and hake were different. Cluster analysis of average diet of intraspecific groups of ling and hake confirmed the persistent diet separation. Although size is a central factor in determining ecological processes, similar sized ling and hake had distinctly different foraging ecology, and therefore could influence the ecosystem in different ways, and be unequally affected by ecosystem fluctuations.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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