J
Julia D. Grant
Researcher at Washington University in St. Louis
Publications - 99
Citations - 5187
Julia D. Grant is an academic researcher from Washington University in St. Louis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Twin study. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 99 publications receiving 4683 citations. Previous affiliations of Julia D. Grant include Saint Louis University & University of Richmond.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Adolescent alcohol use is a risk factor for adult alcohol and drug dependence: evidence from a twin design.
Julia D. Grant,Jeffrey F. Scherrer,Michael T. Lynskey,Michael J. Lyons,Seth A. Eisen,Ming T. Tsuang,William R. True,Kathleen K. Bucholz +7 more
TL;DR: Early regular drinking is associated with later alcohol dependence and use, abuse/dependence on drugs, and unique environmental factors contribute to transitions from early regular alcohol drinking to use, use and dependence on alcohol and other substances.
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Gender Identity, Sexual Orientation, and Eating-Related Pathology in a National Sample of College Students
Elizabeth W. Diemer,Julia D. Grant,Melissa A. Munn-Chernoff,David A. Patterson,Alexis E. Duncan +4 more
TL;DR: Transgender and cisgender SM young adults have elevated rates of compensatory behavior and SR-ED diagnosis and Appropriate interventions for these populations are urgently needed.
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Contributions of parental alcoholism, prenatal substance exposure, and genetic transmission to child ADHD risk: a female twin study
Valerie S. Knopik,Elizabeth P. Sparrow,Pamela A. F. Madden,Kathleen K. Bucholz,James J. Hudziak,Wendy Reich,Wendy S. Slutske,Julia D. Grant,Tara McLaughlin,Alexandre A. Todorov,Richard D. Todd,Andrew C. Heath +11 more
TL;DR: Prenatal and parental risk factors may not be important mediators of influences on risk with much of the association between these variables and ADHD appearing to be indirect.
Journal ArticleDOI
Heritability of Delay Discounting in Adolescence: A Longitudinal Twin Study
TL;DR: This study provides the first evidence for heritability of DD in humans and suggests that DD can be a promising endophenotype for genetic studies of addiction and externalizing disorders.
Journal ArticleDOI
A quantitative-trait genome-wide association study of alcoholism risk in the community: findings and implications.
Andrew C. Heath,John Whitfield,Nicholas G. Martin,Michele L. Pergadia,Alison Goate,Penelope A. Lind,Brian P. McEvoy,Andrew J. Schrage,Julia D. Grant,Yi-Ling Chou,Rachel Zhu,Anjali K. Henders,Sarah E. Medland,Scott D. Gordon,Elliot C. Nelson,Arpana Agrawal,Dale R. Nyholt,Kathleen K. Bucholz,Pamela A. F. Madden,Grant W. Montgomery +19 more
TL;DR: Meta-analyses of consumption data may contribute usefully to gene discovery, and through accumulation across studies, GWAS data may become valuable for improved genetic risk differentiation in research in biological psychiatry (e.g., prospective high-risk or resilience studies).