Discrepancies between informants\u27 reports of children\u27s behavior are robustly observed in clinical child research and have important implications for interpreting the outcomes of controlled treatment trials. However, little is known about the basic psychometric properties of these discrepancies. This study examined the relation between parent-child reporting discrepancies on measures of child social phobia symptoms, administered before and after treatment for social phobia. Participants included a clinic sample of 81 children (7-16 years old [M=11.75, SD=2.57]; 39 girls, 42 boys) and their parents receiving treatment as part of a multisite controlled trial. Pretreatment parent-child reporting discrepancies predicted parent-child discr...
Previous research suggests that discrepant ratings of symptoms, behaviors, and competencies may have...
Background: Informant discrepancies between mother and child have challenged the assessment, classif...
Abstract Objective: In this study the authors examined whether discrepancies between parent and yout...
Discrepancies between informants\u27 reports of children\u27s behavior are robustly observed in clin...
Discrepancies between informants\u27 reports of children\u27s behavior are robustly observed in clin...
There are numerous empirical studies demonstrating that agreement between parent-reports of youth an...
Disagreement between parents and children about a child’s symptoms, termed parent/child informant di...
Discrepancies often exist among different informants ’ (e.g., parents, children, teachers) ratings o...
Discrepancies among informants' ratings of child psychopathology have important implications for dia...
Background: Assessments of child psychopathology commonly rely on multiple informants, e.g., parents...
In this study, the authors examined the relations among clinician ratings of treatment improvement a...
Discrepancies often exist among different informants' (e.g., parents, children, teachers) ratings of...
In this study, the authors examined the relations among clinician ratings of treatment improvement a...
It is well-established that informant agreement on self-report measures of psychopathology is quite ...
In this study the authors examined whether discrepancies between parent and youth reports of the you...
Previous research suggests that discrepant ratings of symptoms, behaviors, and competencies may have...
Background: Informant discrepancies between mother and child have challenged the assessment, classif...
Abstract Objective: In this study the authors examined whether discrepancies between parent and yout...
Discrepancies between informants\u27 reports of children\u27s behavior are robustly observed in clin...
Discrepancies between informants\u27 reports of children\u27s behavior are robustly observed in clin...
There are numerous empirical studies demonstrating that agreement between parent-reports of youth an...
Disagreement between parents and children about a child’s symptoms, termed parent/child informant di...
Discrepancies often exist among different informants ’ (e.g., parents, children, teachers) ratings o...
Discrepancies among informants' ratings of child psychopathology have important implications for dia...
Background: Assessments of child psychopathology commonly rely on multiple informants, e.g., parents...
In this study, the authors examined the relations among clinician ratings of treatment improvement a...
Discrepancies often exist among different informants' (e.g., parents, children, teachers) ratings of...
In this study, the authors examined the relations among clinician ratings of treatment improvement a...
It is well-established that informant agreement on self-report measures of psychopathology is quite ...
In this study the authors examined whether discrepancies between parent and youth reports of the you...
Previous research suggests that discrepant ratings of symptoms, behaviors, and competencies may have...
Background: Informant discrepancies between mother and child have challenged the assessment, classif...
Abstract Objective: In this study the authors examined whether discrepancies between parent and yout...