scispace - formally typeset
P

Pamela M. Diamond

Researcher at University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Publications -  82
Citations -  2529

Pamela M. Diamond is an academic researcher from University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 79 publications receiving 2249 citations. Previous affiliations of Pamela M. Diamond include University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio & University of Texas at Austin.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The Use of Individually Tailored Environmental Supports to Improve Medication Adherence and Outcomes in Schizophrenia

TL;DR: Findings indicate that supports targeting medication adherence can improve and maintain this behavior, and comprehensive supports targeting multiple domains of functioning are necessary to improve functional outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

The short-form Buss-Perry Aggression Questionnaire (BPAQ-SF): a validation study with federal offenders.

TL;DR: Build validity was supported by high correlations between the subscales of the BPAQ-SF and several relevant subscales on the Personality Assessment Inventory (PAI), and those offenders with prior history of violence, head injuries, childhood abuse, residential treatment, custody, or foster care as a child had higher scores on the B PAQ subscales.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cross-validation of Levenson's Psychopathy Scale in a sample of federal female inmates.

TL;DR: The egocentric and callous factors of the LSRPS do not seem to measure precisely the same construct as the primary psychopathy factor from the Levenson et al. study, suggesting evidence of concurrent validity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Revision, Criterion Validity, and Multigroup Assessment of the Reactions to Homosexuality Scale

TL;DR: The Reactions to Homosexuality Scale is revised using exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses and a 7-item, 3-factor reduced version is identified that demonstrated measurement invariance across racial/ethnic categorizations and between English and Spanish versions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Taxometric analysis of the Levenson Self-Report Psychopathy scale.

TL;DR: Levenson's Self-Report Psychopathy scale was administered to male and female federal prison inmates and showed consistent support for a dimensional interpretation of the latent structure of psychopathy, corroborating previous research conducted on the Psychopathy Checklist and Psychopathic Personality Inventory.