Genetic effects on adolescent depression have been consistently reported, but little is known about mediating pathways from the distal genotype to resultant behavioral symptoms. Identifying intermediate risk markers may provide clues on these pathways. In the present study, longitudinal twin and sibling data were used to address 3 issues pertaining to attributional style as a putative marker of genetic risk for adolescent depression: state independence by assessing predictive effects between attributional style and depressive symptoms, heritability of attributional style at different time points, and genetic links between attributional style and depressive symptoms characterizing concurrent and longitudinal associations. The authors further...
Objective: To test for gene-environment interaction with depressive symptoms and family conflict. Sp...
There is heterogeneity between depression in childhood, adolescence and adulthood in terms of the ge...
Depressive symptoms and alcohol use are frequently positively associated during adolescence. This st...
Negative attributional style has been associated with depressive symptoms in children. Yet, it is un...
BACKGROUND: Genetic risks for depression may be expressed through greater exposure towards environme...
Abstract Background Despite many attempts to understand the genetic architecture of depression, litt...
Background: There is a substantial overlap between genes affecting anxiety and depression. Both anxi...
Research has focused more and more on the interplay between genetics and environment in predicting d...
Background: Evidence suggests that depressive symptoms become increasingly heritable as children gro...
Childhood depressive conditions have been explored from multiple theoretical approaches but with few...
Genetic predispositions play an important role in the development of internalizing and externalizing...
Psychopathology theories, clinical observations, and research all point to multiple sources of liabi...
ABSTRACT We tested the structure and magnitude of genetic and environmental influences on the overla...
Despite the importance of dysfunctional attitudes in the development and maintenance of depression, ...
Objective: To test for gene-environment interaction with depressive symptoms and family conflict. Sp...
There is heterogeneity between depression in childhood, adolescence and adulthood in terms of the ge...
Depressive symptoms and alcohol use are frequently positively associated during adolescence. This st...
Negative attributional style has been associated with depressive symptoms in children. Yet, it is un...
BACKGROUND: Genetic risks for depression may be expressed through greater exposure towards environme...
Abstract Background Despite many attempts to understand the genetic architecture of depression, litt...
Background: There is a substantial overlap between genes affecting anxiety and depression. Both anxi...
Research has focused more and more on the interplay between genetics and environment in predicting d...
Background: Evidence suggests that depressive symptoms become increasingly heritable as children gro...
Childhood depressive conditions have been explored from multiple theoretical approaches but with few...
Genetic predispositions play an important role in the development of internalizing and externalizing...
Psychopathology theories, clinical observations, and research all point to multiple sources of liabi...
ABSTRACT We tested the structure and magnitude of genetic and environmental influences on the overla...
Despite the importance of dysfunctional attitudes in the development and maintenance of depression, ...
Objective: To test for gene-environment interaction with depressive symptoms and family conflict. Sp...
There is heterogeneity between depression in childhood, adolescence and adulthood in terms of the ge...
Depressive symptoms and alcohol use are frequently positively associated during adolescence. This st...