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Elizabeth B. Owens
Researcher at University of California, Berkeley
Publications - 52
Citations - 5609
Elizabeth B. Owens is an academic researcher from University of California, Berkeley. The author has contributed to research in topics: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 50 publications receiving 5093 citations. Previous affiliations of Elizabeth B. Owens include University of California & University of California, San Francisco.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Clinical relevance of the primary findings of the MTA: success rates based on severity of ADHD and ODD symptoms at the end of treatment.
James M. Swanson,Helena C. Kraemer,Stephen P. Hinshaw,L. Eugene Arnold,C. Keith Conners,Howard Abikoff,Walter Clevenger,Mark Davies,Glen R. Elliott,Laurence L. Greenhill,Lily Hechtman,Betsy Hoza,Peter S. Jensen,John S. March,Jeffrey H. Newcorn,Elizabeth B. Owens,William E. Pelham,E. Schiller,Joanne B. Severe,Steve Simpson,Benedetto Vitiello,Karen C. Wells,Timothy Wigal,Min Wu +23 more
TL;DR: These secondary analyses confirm the primary findings and clarify clinical decisions about the choice between multimodal and unimodal treatment with medication.
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Infant and Toddler Pathways Leading to Early Externalizing Disorders
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined pathways leading to specific types of early externalizing disorders and found that severe conduct problems in early childhood are the result of deficits in the caregiving environment.
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Effects of Preschool Parents' Power Assertive Patterns and Practices on Adolescent Development
TL;DR: This paper investigated the effects of preschool patterns of parental authority on adolescent competence and emotional health and differentiated between confrontive and coercive power-assertive practices which accounted partially for differential long-term effects of the preschool patterns.
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Prospective follow-up of girls with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder into early adulthood: continuing impairment includes elevated risk for suicide attempts and self-injury.
Stephen P. Hinshaw,Elizabeth B. Owens,Christine A. Zalecki,Suzanne Perrigue Huggins,Adriana J. Montenegro-Nevado,Emily Schrodek,Erika N. Swanson +6 more
TL;DR: Girls with childhood ADHD maintain marked impairment by early adulthood, spreading from symptoms to risk for serious self-harm, and the viability of different diagnostic conceptions of adult ADHD and their linkages with core life impairments is addressed.
Journal ArticleDOI
The development of early externalizing problems among children from low-income families: a transformational perspective.
Daniel S. Shaw,Emily B. Winslow,Elizabeth B. Owens,Joan I. Vondra,Jeffrey F. Cohn,Richard Q. Bell +5 more
TL;DR: The authors examined pathways leading to early externalizing problems from age 1 to 3 1/2 in a design that took advantage of our knowledge of normative progression and normative socialization as well as findings from research on risk.