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Nomita Chhabildas

Researcher at University of Denver

Publications -  13
Citations -  2560

Nomita Chhabildas is an academic researcher from University of Denver. The author has contributed to research in topics: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder & Comorbidity. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 13 publications receiving 2413 citations. Previous affiliations of Nomita Chhabildas include University of Colorado Boulder & Boston Children's Hospital.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Neuropsychological Analyses of Comorbidity Between Reading Disability and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: In Search of the Common Deficit

TL;DR: The group with comorbid RD and ADHD exhibited the combination of the deficits in the RD-only and ADHD-only groups, providing evidence against the phenocopy and cognitive subtype hypotheses as explanations for the co-occurrence ofRD and ADHD.
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A Comparison of the Neuropsychological Profiles of the DSM-IV Subtypes of ADHD

TL;DR: The results do not support distinct neuropsychological deficits in ADHD-IA and ADHD-C children, and suggest that symptoms of inattention, rather than symptoms of hyperactivity/impulsivity, are associated with neuroPsychological impairment.
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A comparison of the cognitive deficits in reading disability and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder.

TL;DR: The RD + ADHD group was most impaired on virtually all measures, providing evidence against the phenocopy hypothesis as an explanation for comorbidity between RD and ADHD.
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Etiology and neuropsychology of comorbidity between RD and ADHD: the case for multiple-deficit models.

TL;DR: Phenotypic analyses supported the hypothesis that both RD and ADHD arise from multiple cognitive deficits rather than a single primary cognitive deficit, and twin analyses indicated that this shared weakness is primarily due to common genetic influences that increase susceptibility to both disorders.
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A Twin MRI Study of Size Variations in the Human Brain

TL;DR: Evidence is provided for the heritability of individual differences in brain size which do not vary markedly by hemisphere or for neocortex relative to subcortex, as well as for genetic influences on brain size.