Adopting a developmental epidemiology perspective, the current study examines sources of risk heterogeneity for internalizing symptomatology among children of alcoholic parents (COAs). Parent-based factors, including comorbid diagnoses and the number of alcoholic parents in the family, as well as child-based factors, namely child gender, formed the indicators of heterogeneity. Following a novel approach to cross-study methods, we present a three-stage analysis involving measurement development using Item Response Theory, examination of study effects on latent trajectories over time using Latent Curve Modeling, and prediction of these latent trajectories testing our theoretically-derived hypotheses in two longitudinal investigations across b...
Parents with psychopathology such as alcohol use disorder (AUD) that confers risk for suicide attemp...
The current study examined differences between children of alcoholic (COAs) and nonalcoholic parents...
Children of alcoholics (COAs) are children who have grown up in families in which either one or both...
Adopting a developmental epidemiology perspective, the current study examines sources of risk hetero...
We examined heterogeneity in risk for externalizing symptoms in children of alcoholic parents as it ...
We tested whether children show greater internalizing symptoms when their parents are actively abusi...
Although previous studies show that children of alcoholic parents have higher rates of externalizing...
One of four children in the United States lives in a family in which the child is exposed to alcohol...
The current study tested whether and why COAs show telescoped (adolescent) drinking initiation-to-di...
Background. We examined the association between parental alcohol use disorders and patterns of alcoh...
The current study tested whether and why children of alcoholics (COAs) showed telescoped (adolescent...
The current study examined the distal, proximal, and time-varying effects of parents’ alcohol-relate...
Research emanating from the field of developmental science indicates that initial risk factors for s...
Background: As part of the ongoing Collaborative Study of the Genetics of Alcoholism, we performed ...
Abstract Background: Currently in the United States there is an estimated 26.8 million children of a...
Parents with psychopathology such as alcohol use disorder (AUD) that confers risk for suicide attemp...
The current study examined differences between children of alcoholic (COAs) and nonalcoholic parents...
Children of alcoholics (COAs) are children who have grown up in families in which either one or both...
Adopting a developmental epidemiology perspective, the current study examines sources of risk hetero...
We examined heterogeneity in risk for externalizing symptoms in children of alcoholic parents as it ...
We tested whether children show greater internalizing symptoms when their parents are actively abusi...
Although previous studies show that children of alcoholic parents have higher rates of externalizing...
One of four children in the United States lives in a family in which the child is exposed to alcohol...
The current study tested whether and why COAs show telescoped (adolescent) drinking initiation-to-di...
Background. We examined the association between parental alcohol use disorders and patterns of alcoh...
The current study tested whether and why children of alcoholics (COAs) showed telescoped (adolescent...
The current study examined the distal, proximal, and time-varying effects of parents’ alcohol-relate...
Research emanating from the field of developmental science indicates that initial risk factors for s...
Background: As part of the ongoing Collaborative Study of the Genetics of Alcoholism, we performed ...
Abstract Background: Currently in the United States there is an estimated 26.8 million children of a...
Parents with psychopathology such as alcohol use disorder (AUD) that confers risk for suicide attemp...
The current study examined differences between children of alcoholic (COAs) and nonalcoholic parents...
Children of alcoholics (COAs) are children who have grown up in families in which either one or both...