The Oxford Handbook of Externalizing Spectrum Disorders -

The Oxford Handbook of Externalizing Spectrum Disorders

Buch | Hardcover
544 Seiten
2015
Oxford University Press Inc (Verlag)
978-0-19-932467-5 (ISBN)
215,10 inkl. MwSt
Recent developments in the conceptualization of externalizing spectrum disorders, including attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, conduct disorder, antisocial personality disorder, and substance use disorders, suggest common genetic and neural substrates. Despite this, neither shared vulnerabilities nor their implications for developmental models of externalizing conduct are captured by prevailing nosologic and diagnostic systems, such as the DSM-5.

The Oxford Handbook of Externalizing Spectrum Disorders is the first book of its kind to capture the developmental psychopathology of externalizing spectrum disorders by examining causal factors across levels of analysis and developmental epochs, while departing from the categorical perspective. World renowned experts on externalizing psychopathology demonstrate how shared genetic and neural vulnerabilities predispose to trait impulsivity, a highly heritable personality construct that is often shaped by adverse environments into increasingly intractable forms of externalizing conduct across development. Consistent with contemporary models of almost all forms of psychopathology, the Handbook emphasizes the importance of neurobiological vulnerability and environmental risk interactions in the expression of externalizing behavior across the lifespan. The volume concludes with an integrative, ontogenic process model of externalizing psychopathology in which diverse equifinal and multifinal pathways to disorder are specified.

Theodore P. Beauchaine, PhD, is Professor of Psychology at The Ohio State University. He is past recipient of the American Psychological Association Distinguished Scientific Award for Early Career Contributions to Psychology and has served on numerous editorial boards. His research addresses the neural underpinnings and development of both behavioral impulsivity and emotion dysregulation in children, adolescents, and adults. Stephen P. Hinshaw, PhD, is Professor of Psychology at University of California, Berkeley. He is an internationally recognized research investigator of child and adolescent disorders, award-winning teacher, and author/co-author of more than 275 research articles and chapters plus 10 books. His most recent book, with Richard Scheffler, is The ADHD Explosion: Myths, Medication, Money, and Today's Push for Performance. He is the 2016 recipient of the prestigious James McKeen Cattell Fellow Award for a lifetime of distinguished contributions to applied psychological science.

Part 1: Models of Externalizing Behavior ; 1. Overview of DSM Disruptive Behavior Disorders ; Deborah Drabick, Elizabeth Steinberg, and Ashley Hampton ; 2. Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: Similarities to and Differences from other Externalizing Disorders ; Shaikh I. Ahmad and Stephen P. Hinshaw ; 3. Substance Use Disorders as Externalizing Outcomes ; Christopher J. Patrick, Jens Foell, Noah C. Venables, and Darrell A. Worthy ; 4. Self-Injury, Borderline Personality Development, and the Externalizing Spectrum ; Erin A. Kaufman, Sheila E. Crowell, and Stephanie D. Stepp ; 5. The Externalizing Spectrum of Personality and Psychopathology: An Empirical and Quantitative Alternative to Discrete Disorder Approaches ; Robert Krueger and Jennifer Tackett ; 6. The Developmental Psychopathology Perspective on Externalizing Behavior Dimensions and Externalizing Disorders ; Stephen P. Hinshaw and Theodore P. Beauchaine ; Part II: Biological Vulnerabilities to Externalizing Spectrum Disorders ; 7. Behavioral Genetics of the Externalizing Spectrum ; Devika Dhamija, Catherine Tuvblad, and Laura Baker ; 8. Molecular Genetic Approaches to Studying the Externalizing Spectrum ; Ian Gizer, Jacqueline M. Otto, and Jarrod M. Ellingson ; 9. Molecular Genetics of the Externalizing Spectrum ; Ian Gizer, Jacqueline M. Otto, and Jarrod M. Ellingson ; 10. Temperament and Vulnerability to Externalizing Behavior ; Fernanda V. Krieger and Argyris Stringaris ; 11. Midbrain Neural Mechanisms of Trait Impulsivity ; Aimee Zisner and Theodore P. Beauchaine ; 12. Prefrontal and Anterior Cingulate Cortex Mechanisms of Impulsivity ; Natalie Castellanos-Ryan and Jean Seguin ; 13. Neural Mechanisms of Low Trait Anxiety and Risk for Externalizing Behavior ; Philip J. Corr and Neil McNaughton ; 14. Sex Differences in the Prevalence and Expression of Externalizing Behavior ; Robert Eme ; Part III: Socialization Mechanisms of Externalizing Behavior ; 15. Child Maltreatment and Vulnerability to Externalizing Spectrum Disorders ; Adrienne VanZomeren-Dohm, Xiaoyenan Xu, Eric Thibodeau, and Dante Cicchetti ; 16. Coercive Family Processes in the Development of Externalizing Behavior: Incorporating Neurobiology into Intervention Research ; James Snyder ; 17. Friendship and Adolescent Problem Behavior: Deviancy Training and Coercive Joining as Dynamic Mediators ; Thomas J. Dishion, Hanjoe Kim, and Jenn-Yun Tein ; 18. Neighborhood Risk and Development of Antisocial Behavior ; Wesley Jennings and Bryanna Hahn Fox ; 19. Incarceration and Development of Delinquency ; Sytske Besemer and Joseph Murray ; Part IV: Cognitive and Emotional Vulnerabilities to Externalizing Spectrum Disorders ; 20. Externalizing Behaviors and Attribution Biases ; Anne-Marie R. Iselin, Allison A. McVey, and Colleen M. Ehatt ; 21. Callous-Unemotional Traits and the Development of Externalizing Spectrum Disorders ; Farrah N. Golmaryami and Paul Frick ; 22. Low Intelligence and Poor Executive Function as Vulnerabilities to Externalizing Behavior ; Michelle Pinsonneault, Sophie Parent, Natalie Castellanos-Ryan, and Jean Seguin ; Part V: Other Vulnerabilities to Externalizing Spectrum Disorders ; 23. Head Injury and Externalizing Behavior ; Joan Gerring and Roma A. Vasa ; 24. Teratogen Exposure and Externalizing Behavior ; Diana M. Graham, Leila Glass, and Sara Mattson ; Part VI: Externalizing Comorbidities ; 25. Externalizing and Internalizing Comorbidity ; Florence Levy, David J. Hawes, and Adam Johns ; 26. Comorbidity Among Externalizing Disorders ; Molly Nikolas ; Part VII: Conclusions and Future Directions ; 27. An Ontogenic Processes Model of Externalizing Psychopathology ; Theodore P. Beauchaine, Tiffany Shadery, and Stephen P. Hinshaw ; Index

Erscheint lt. Verlag 14.12.2015
Reihe/Serie Oxford Library of Psychology
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 257 x 183 mm
Gewicht 1361 g
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Psychologie Entwicklungspsychologie
Geisteswissenschaften Psychologie Klinische Psychologie
Geisteswissenschaften Psychologie Persönlichkeitsstörungen
ISBN-10 0-19-932467-0 / 0199324670
ISBN-13 978-0-19-932467-5 / 9780199324675
Zustand Neuware
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