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Conor Duggan
Researcher at University of Nottingham
Publications - 158
Citations - 5653
Conor Duggan is an academic researcher from University of Nottingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Personality & Personality disorders. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 153 publications receiving 5357 citations. Previous affiliations of Conor Duggan include University of Leicester & Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust.
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Journal Article
Adult antisocial syndrome with comorbid borderline pathology: association with severe childhood conduct disorder.
TL;DR: The functional link between CD and adult antisocial symptoms appears to be mediated, or at least moderated, by co-occurring borderline pathology.
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Psychoeducation with problem-solving (PEPS) therapy for adults with personality disorder: a pragmatic randomised controlled trial to determine the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a manualised intervention to improve social functioning.
Mary McMurran,Mike J. Crawford,Joe Reilly,Juan Delport,Paul McCrone,Diane Whitham,Wei Tan,Conor Duggan,Alan A Montgomery,Hywel C Williams,Clive E Adams,Huajie Jin,Matthew Lewis,Florence Day +13 more
TL;DR: PEPS therapy plus usual treatment was no more effective than usual treatment alone for the primary outcome and the intervention had a 64% likelihood of being the more cost-effective option.
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Altered memory and affective instability in prisoners assessed for dangerous and severe personality disorder
TL;DR: The data suggest that memory deficits have some specificity in relation to the constituent traits of borderline personality disorder and indicate that neuropsychological assessment may be a source of useful adjunctive information for distinguishing between the cognitive and psychological difficulties of individual prisoners.
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Patients with a history of arson admitted to medium security: Characteristics on admission and follow-up postdischarge
TL;DR: It was established that not all incidents of arson led to a prosecution, and it was concluded that there are weaknesses in the areas of both risk assessment and evidence-based treatment for arsonists.
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A Comparison of adults with antisocial personality traits with and without childhood conduct disorder
TL;DR: A failure to find clinically important differences between the two groups is in agreement with previous reports and needs to be taken into account in future revisions of ASPD in DSM.