Child and Adolescent Psychopathology
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More About This Title Child and Adolescent Psychopathology

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Child and Adolescent Psychopathology provides a unique opportunity to expose students to a cutting-edge approach to childhood and adolescent disorders by addressing and integrating the most current research on the genetic, neurobiological, and environmental factors that contribute to them. The text also emphasizes how, when, and why disorders emerge among young people and in what ways symptom profiles change at different stages of development.

English

Theodore P. Beauchaine, Ph.D., University of Washington, Seattle
Dr. Beauchaine is the Robert Bolles & Yasuko Endo endowed Associate Professor of Psychology at the University of Washington in Seattle. He recently received an Early Career Award from the American Psychological Association for his work addressing neurobiological vulnerabilities and environmental risk factors for conduct problems and depression.

Stephen P. Hinshaw, Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley
Dr. Hinshaw is Chair of the Psychology Department at the University of California, Berkeley.  An internationally recognized scholar in the area of developmental psychopathology, he is Incoming Editor of Psychological Bulletin and Associate Editor of Development and Psychopathology.

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List of Contributors vii

Preface xi

Foreword Michael Rutter xv

Part I:THE DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOPATHOLOGY APPROACH TO UNDERSTANDING BEHAVIOR

1. Developmental Psychopathology as a Scientifi c Discipline: Relevance to Behavioral and Emotional Disorders of Childhood and Adolescence 3
Stephen P. Hinshaw

2. A Multiple- Levels- of- Analysis Perspective on Research in Development and Psychopathology 27
Dante Cicchetti

3. Genetic and Environmental Infl uences on Behavior 58
Theodore P. Beauchaine, Stephen P. Hinshaw, and Lisa Gatzke-Kopp

Part II:RISK FACTORS FOR PSYCHOPATHOLOGY

4. Child Maltreatment: A Neurodevelopmental Perspective on the Role of Trauma and Neglect in Psychpathology 93
Bruce D. Perry

5. Impulsivity and Vulnerability to Psychopathology 129
Theodore P. Beauchaine and Emily Neuhaus

6. Behavioral Inhibition as a Risk Factor for Psychopathology 157
Jerome Kagan

7. Exposure to Teratogenic Agents as a Risk Factor for Psychopathology 180
Susanna L. Fryer, Nicole A. Crocker, and Sarah N. Mattson

8. Brain Injury as a Risk Factor for Psychopathology 208
Lisa M. Gatzke- Kopp and Katherine E. Shannon

9. Affective Style and Risk for Psychopathology 234
James A. Coan and John J. B. Allen

10. Emotion Dysregulation as a Risk Factor for Psychopathology 265
Pamela M. Cole and Sarah E. Hall

Part III:EXTERNALIZING BEHAVIOR DISORDERS

11. Attention- Deficit / Hyperactivity Disorder 301
Joel Nigg and Molly Nikolas

12. Oppositional Defi ant Disorder, Conduct Disorder, and Juvenile Delinquency 335
Benjamin B. Lahey

13. Antisocial Personality Development 370
Kristina D. Hiatt and Thomas J. Dishion

14. Prevalence of Alcohol and Drug Involvement During Childhood and Adolescence 405
Sandra A. Brown

Part IV:INTERNALIZING BEHAVIOR DISORDERS

15. Anxiety Disorders 447
Carl Weems and Wendy Silverman

16. Depressive Disorders 477
Daniel N. Klein, Dana C. Torpey, Sara J. Bufferd, and Margaret W. Dyson

17. The Development of Borderline Personality Disorder and Self- Injurious Behavior 510
Sheila E. Crowell, Theodore P. Beauchaine, and Mark F. Lenzenweger

Part V:OTHER PSYCHOLOGICAL DISORDERS

18. Bipolar Disorder 543
Joseph C. Blader and Gabrielle A. Carlson

19. Autism Spectrum Disorders: A Developmental Perspective 575
Geraldine Dawson and Susan Faja

20. Childhood Schizophrenia 614
Robert F. Asarnow and Claudia L. Kernan

21. Eating Disorders 643
Eric Stice and Cynthia M. Bulik

Indexes 671

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"Readers [of this text] will learn an immense amount about risk and protective factors, about development, about clinical disorders, and about neuroscience, but most of all they will be helped in how to think about the issues as they will arise in the future and not just as they face us today."
Michael Rutter, Professor of Developmental Psychopathology, Institute of Psychiatry, Kings College, London UK
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