E
Edwin H. Cook
Researcher at University of Illinois at Chicago
Publications - 339
Citations - 61045
Edwin H. Cook is an academic researcher from University of Illinois at Chicago. The author has contributed to research in topics: Autism & Heritability of autism. The author has an hindex of 102, co-authored 337 publications receiving 54518 citations. Previous affiliations of Edwin H. Cook include University of Chicago & University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
MECP2 structural and 3'-UTR variants in schizophrenia, autism and other psychiatric diseases: a possible association with autism.
Akane Shibayama,Edwin H. Cook,Jinong Feng,Cecile Glanzmann,Jin Yan,Nicholas John Craddock,Ian Jones,David Goldman,Leonard L. Heston,Steve S. Sommer +9 more
TL;DR: DNA samples from individuals with schizophrenia and other psychiatric diseases were scanned in order to explore whether the phenotypic spectrum of mutations in the MECP2 gene can extend beyond the traditional diagnoses of RTT in females and severe neonatal encephalopathy in males.
Journal ArticleDOI
Dopamine Transporter Genotype and Methylphenidate Dose Response in Children with ADHD
Mark A. Stein,Irwin D. Waldman,Christopher S. Sarampote,Karen E. Seymour,Adelaide S. Robb,Charles Conlon,Soojeong Kim,Edwin H. Cook +7 more
TL;DR: Children who were homozygous for the less common, 9-repeat DAT1 3′-UTR genotype displayed a distinct dose–response curve from that of the other genotype groups, with an absence of typical linear improvement when the dose was increased from 18 mg to 36 and 54mg.
Journal ArticleDOI
Long-term sertraline treatment of children and adolescents with obsessive-compulsive disorder
Edwin H. Cook,Karen Dineen Wagner,John S. March,Joseph Biederman,Phyllis Landau,Robert Wolkow,Michael Messig +6 more
TL;DR: Sertraline was effective and generally well tolerated in the treatment of childhood and adolescent OCD for up to 52 weeks and improvement was seen with continued treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI
Interaction of Prenatal Exposure to Cigarettes and MAOA Genotype in Pathways to Youth Antisocial Behavior
Lauren S. Wakschlag,Emily O. Kistner,Daniel S. Pine,Gretchen Biesecker,Kate E. Pickett,Andrew D. Skol,Vanja Dukic,Robert James Blair,Bennett L. Leventhal,Nancy J. Cox,James L. Burns,Kristen Kasza,Rosalind J. Wright,Edwin H. Cook +13 more
TL;DR: Findings suggest that the MAOA uVNTR genotype, prenatal exposure to cigarettes and sex interact to predict antisocial behavior and related information-processing patterns.
Journal ArticleDOI
New complexities in the genetics of stuttering: significant sex-specific linkage signals
Rathi Suresh,Nicoline Grinager Ambrose,Cheryl A. Roe,Anna Pluzhnikov,Jacqueline K. Wittke-Thompson,Maggie C.Y. Ng,Xiaolin Wu,Edwin H. Cook,Cecilia Lundstrom,Marie Garsten,Ruth Ezrati,Ehud Yairi,Nancy J. Cox +12 more
TL;DR: The hypothesis that the genetic component to stuttering has significant sex effects is supported, based on linkage studies in 100 families of European descent ascertained in the United States, Sweden, and Israel.