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Frederick L. Coolidge

Researcher at University of Colorado Colorado Springs

Publications -  175
Citations -  5629

Frederick L. Coolidge is an academic researcher from University of Colorado Colorado Springs. The author has contributed to research in topics: Personality & Personality disorders. The author has an hindex of 41, co-authored 158 publications receiving 5152 citations. Previous affiliations of Frederick L. Coolidge include Florida International University & University of Colorado Boulder.

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Psychometric Properties of the Beck Depression Inventory—II (BDI-II) Among Community-Dwelling Older Adults

TL;DR: The BDI-II appears to have strong psychometric support as a screening measure for depression among older adults in the general population and as an assessment instrument in behaviorally based psychotherapy.
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Working Memory, its Executive Functions, and the Emergence of Modern Thinking

TL;DR: This paper examined the possible origins of modern thinking by evaluating the cognitive models of working memory, executive functions and their interrelationship, and proposed that a genetic mutation affected neural networks in the prefrontal cortex approximately 60,000 to 130,000 years ago.
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The expert Neandertal mind

TL;DR: Cognitive neuropsychology, cognitive anthropology, and cognitive archaeology are combined to yield a picture of Neandertal cognition in which expert performance via long-term working memory is the centerpiece of problem solving.
Book

Statistics: A Gentle Introduction

TL;DR: In this paper, the Chi-square distribution is used to measure the central tendency of the distribution of the number of samples in a set of different groups, and the t-test for independent groups is used for the analysis of variance.
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The heritability of gender identity disorder in a child and adolescent twin sample

TL;DR: The heritability and prevalence of the gender identity disorder was examined, as well as its comorbidity with separation anxiety and depression, in a nonretrospective study of child and adolescent twins, supporting the hypothesis that there is a strong heritable component to GID.