M
Michael N. Hallquist
Researcher at Pennsylvania State University
Publications - 123
Citations - 5904
Michael N. Hallquist is an academic researcher from Pennsylvania State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Borderline personality disorder & Personality. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 110 publications receiving 4322 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael N. Hallquist include Binghamton University & Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The nuisance of nuisance regression: spectral misspecification in a common approach to resting-state fMRI preprocessing reintroduces noise and obscures functional connectivity.
TL;DR: Evidence is provided that the effects of head motion and other nuisance signals are poorly controlled when the fMRI time series are bandpass-filtered but the regressors are unfiltered, resulting in the inadvertent reintroduction of nuisance-related variation into frequencies previously suppressed by the bandpass filter.
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MplusAutomation: An R Package for Facilitating Large-Scale Latent Variable Analyses in Mplus
TL;DR: An introduction to the MplusAutomation package is provided using applied examples including a large-scale simulation study to support methodological developments in structural equation modeling using Mplus.
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Developmental Stages and Sex Differences of White Matter and Behavioral Development through Adolescence: A Longitudinal Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) Study
TL;DR: Analysis of diffusion tensor imaging in 128 individuals aged 8-28 found that earlier WM growth in adolescence was associated with faster and more efficient responding and better inhibitory control whereas later growth in adulthood wasassociated with poorer performance, suggesting that the timing of WM growth is important for cognitive development.
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Progress in achieving quantitative classification of psychopathology
Robert F. Krueger,Roman Kotov,David Watson,Miriam K. Forbes,Nicholas R. Eaton,Camilo J. Ruggero,Leonard J. Simms,Thomas A. Widiger,Thomas M. Achenbach,Bo Bach,R. Michael Bagby,Marina A. Bornovalova,William T. Carpenter,Michael Chmielewski,David C. Cicero,Lee Anna Clark,Christopher C. Conway,Barbara Declercq,Colin G. DeYoung,Anna R. Docherty,Laura E. Drislane,Michael B. First,Kelsie T. Forbush,Michael N. Hallquist,John D. Haltigan,Christopher J. Hopwood,Masha Y. Ivanova,Katherine G. Jonas,Robert D. Latzman,Kristian E. Markon,Joshua D. Miller,Leslie C. Morey,Stephanie N. Mullins-Sweatt,Johan Ormel,Praveetha Patalay,Christopher J. Patrick,Aaron L. Pincus,Darrel A. Regier,Ulrich Reininghaus,Leslie Rescorla,Douglas B. Samuel,Martin Sellbom,Alexander J. Shackman,Andrew E. Skodol,Tim Slade,Susan C. South,Matthew Sunderland,Jennifer L. Tackett,Noah C. Venables,Irwin D. Waldman,Monika A. Waszczuk,Mark H. Waugh,Aidan G. C. Wright,David H. Zald,Johannes Zimmermann +54 more
TL;DR: The aims and current foci of the HiTOP Consortium, a group of 70 investigators working together to study empirical classification of psychopathology, are described, which pertain to continued research on the empirical organization of psychopathological constructs; the connection between personality and psychopathology; the utility of empirically based psychopathology constructs in both research and the clinic.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Contribution of Network Organization and Integration to the Development of Cognitive Control.
Scott Marek,Scott Marek,Kai Hwang,William Foran,Michael N. Hallquist,Michael N. Hallquist,Beatriz Luna +6 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that network organization is stable throughout adolescence, and support a novel, two-stage model of neural development, in which networks stabilize prior to adolescence and subsequently increase their integration to support the cross-domain incorporation of information processing critical for mature cognitive control.