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The origins of cognitive deficits in victimized children: implications for neuroscientists and clinicians
Journal article   Peer reviewed

The origins of cognitive deficits in victimized children: implications for neuroscientists and clinicians

A. Danese, T.E. Moffitt, L. Arseneault, B.A. Bleiberg, P.B. Dinardo, S.B. Gandelman, R. Houts, A. Ambler, H.L. Fisher, R. Poulton, …
American Journal of Psychiatry, Vol.174(4), pp.349-361
2017
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/10523/13889
Appears in  The Dunedin Study

Abstract

adolescence adolescent adult adulthood child child abuse childhood cognitive defect cohort analysis comprehension environmental factor executive function genetic risk health practitioner human intellectual impairment longitudinal study major clinical study memory mental capacity mental test neurologist New Zealand perception preschool child risk assessment risk factor school child scientist scoring system victim violence causality cognitive dysfunction crime victim female genetics genotype environment interaction intelligence male neuropsychological test personality assessment prevalence psychology psychometry questionnaire statistics and numerical data twins united kingdom young adult preschool child cohort studies confounding factors (epidemiology) crime victims diseases in twins gene-environment interaction longitudinal studies neuropsychological tests psychometrics risk factors surveys and questionnaires
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