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Michael Rutter

Researcher at King's College London

Publications -  684
Citations -  158378

Michael Rutter is an academic researcher from King's College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Autism & Conduct disorder. The author has an hindex of 188, co-authored 676 publications receiving 151592 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael Rutter include VCU Medical Center & Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences.

Papers
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Gene-environment interplay and psychopathology: multiple varieties but real effects

TL;DR: This review of research evidence on four varieties of gene-environment interplay considers epigenetic mechanisms by which environmental influences alter the effects of genes and focuses on variations in heritability according to environmental circumstances.
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A clinicopathological study of autism.

TL;DR: A neuropathological study of autism was established and brain tissue examined from six mentally handicapped subjects with autism, finding the likely involvement of the cerebral cortex in autism.
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Autism diagnostic interview: a standardized investigator-based instrument

TL;DR: The development of a new standardized investigator-based interview for use in the differential diagnosis of pervasive developmental disorders is described, together with a diagnostic algorithm (using ICD-10 criteria) based on its use.
Book

Stress, coping, and development in children

TL;DR: Stress, Coping, and Development in Children as discussed by the authors examines the problems of stress in children from a neurochemical as well as a developmental perspective, considering a wide range of specific stressors including prematurity, hospitalization, birth of a sibling, deprivation, death of a parent, divorce, and war.
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Stress, coping and development: some issues and some questions.

TL;DR: The concept of psychosocial stress is reviewed in this article in relation to empirical findings on the effects of different types of life, events in childhood and adult life, and various ways in which stress events may influence later development are discussed with particular reference to the possibility of altered sensitivities to later stress.