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1. Screening for Early Emerging Mental Experiences (SEE ME): A Model to Improve Early Detection of Psychosis in Integrated Primary Care

2. Using Experience Sampling Methodology Data to Characterize the Substance Use of Youth With or At-Risk of Psychosis

4. A Public Health Perspective on Screening for Psychosis Within General Practice Clinics

5. N100 Repetition Suppression Indexes Neuroplastic Defects in Clinical High Risk and Psychotic Youth

6. The association between mental health stigma and face emotion recognition in individuals at risk for psychosis

7. Youth Mental Health Screening and Linkage to Care

8. Changes in community providers' screening behaviours, referral practices, and clinical confidence following participation in an early psychosis educational campaign

9. Longitudinal evaluation of visual <scp>P300</scp> amplitude in clinical high‐risk subjects: An <scp>event‐related potential</scp> study

10. Developing an International Standard Set of Patient-Reported Outcome Measures for Psychotic Disorders

11. Calculating individualized risk components using a mobile app-based risk calculator for clinical high risk of psychosis: findings from ShangHai At Risk for Psychosis (SHARP) program

12. Impact of 'psychosis risk' identification: Examining predictors of how youth view themselves

14. Depressive symptom screening and endorsement of psychosis risk-related experiences in a diverse adolescent and young adult outpatient clinic in the US

15. Emotional and stigma-related experiences relative to being told one is at risk for psychosis

16. Computer-aided learning for managing stress: A feasibility trial with clinical high risk adolescents and young adults

17. Clinical high risk for psychosis: The effects of labelling on public stigma in a undergraduate population

18. Depression and clinical high-risk states: Baseline presentation of depressed vs. non-depressed participants in the NAPLS-2 cohort

19. Predictive validity of conversion from the clinical high risk syndrome to frank psychosis

20. Clinical subtypes that predict conversion to psychosis: A canonical correlation analysis study from the ShangHai At Risk for Psychosis program

21. Altered Cellular White Matter But Not Extracellular Free Water on Diffusion MRI in Individuals at Clinical High Risk for Psychosis

22. F61. TRIVIAL TRANSITIONS? SIPS-DEFINED CONVERSIONS TO PSYCHOSIS: ONE YEAR OUTCOME

23. S61. CLINICAL SUBTYPES THAT PREDICT CONVERSION TO PSYCHOSIS: A CANONICAL CORRELATION ANALYSIS STUDY FROM THE SHANGHAI AT RISK FOR PSYCHOSIS (SHARP) PROGRAM

24. Hyperactivity of caudate, parahippocampal, and prefrontal regions during working memory in never-medicated persons at clinical high-risk for psychosis

25. Two-year follow-up of a Chinese sample at clinical high risk for psychosis: timeline of symptoms, help-seeking and conversion

26. Healthy adolescent performance on the MATRICS Consensus Cognitive Battery (MCCB): Developmental data from two samples of volunteers

27. Progress and Future Directions in Research on the Psychosis Prodrome

28. Intervention Strategies for Attenuated Psychosis Syndromes: A Review of Current Practice, Evidence, and Future Directions

29. Cingulum bundle abnormalities and risk for schizophrenia

30. Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders

31. Development of a Boston Treatment Program for Youth at Clinical High Risk for Psychosis: Center for Early Detection, Assessment, and Response to Risk (CEDAR)

32. Abnormal relationships between local and global brain measures in subjects at clinical high risk for psychosis: a pilot study

33. Progressive reduction of auditory evoked gamma in first episode schizophrenia but not clinical high risk individuals

34. Psychosis screening practices in schools: A survey of school-based mental health providers

35. A comparison of conversion rates, clinical profiles and predictors of outcomes in two independent samples of individuals at clinical high risk for psychosis in China

36. M70. Abnormal P300 Novel and P300 Oddball Event Related Potentials in Persons at Clinical High Risk for Psychosis in Shanghai

37. T70. IDENTIFYING YOUTH AT CLINICAL HIGH RISK: WHAT’S THE EMOTIONAL IMPACT?

38. Association of Neurocognition With Transition to Psychosis: Baseline Functioning in the Second Phase of the North American Prodrome Longitudinal Study

40. Neurocognition in the Psychosis Risk Syndrome: A Quantitative and Qualitative Review

41. 13. The Extents of Extracellular and Brain Tissue Related Abnormalities in Subjects at Clinical High Risk of Psychosis

42. Neuropsychological profiles in individuals at clinical high risk for psychosis: Relationship to psychosis and intelligence

44. 21.4 BASELINE CLINICAL AND BIOLOGICAL VARIABLES PREDICTING 1 YEAR OUTCOME OF SUBJECTS AT CLINICAL HIGH RISK OF PSYCHOSIS: INSIGHT FROM SHANGHAI AT RISK FOR PSYCHOSIS (SHARP) PROGRAM

45. O2.8. TRAJECTORIES OF NEUROCOGNITIVE FUNCTIONING OVER TIME IN YOUTH AT CLINICAL HIGH RISK WHO DO AND DO NOT TRANSITION TO PSYCHOSIS

46. 33.1 DRIVERS OF STIGMA FOR THE CLINICAL HIGH-RISK STATE FOR PSYCHOSIS—IS STIGMA DUE TO SYMPTOMS OR THE AT-RISK IDENTIFICATION ITSELF?

47. Implementing Dialectical Behavior Therapy With Adolescents and Their Families in a Community Outpatient Clinic

48. An experimental pilot study of response to invalidation in young women with features of borderline personality disorder

49. Heterogeneity of Psychosis Risk Within Individuals at Clinical High Risk: A Meta-analytical Stratification

50. Early auditory processing evoked potentials (N100) show a continuum of blunting from clinical high risk to psychosis in a pediatric sample

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