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Paul Retzlaff

Researcher at University of Northern Colorado

Publications -  17
Citations -  1710

Paul Retzlaff is an academic researcher from University of Northern Colorado. The author has contributed to research in topics: Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory & Population. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 17 publications receiving 1642 citations.

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Clinical Validation of the Quality of Life Inventory: A Measure of Life Satisfaction for Use in Treatment Planning and Outcome Assessment

TL;DR: This study details the psychometric evaluation of the Quality of Life Inventory (QOLI), a measure of life satisfaction that may complement symptom-oriented measures of psychological functioning in evaluating the outcome of interventions aimed at ameliorating mental disorders, disabling physical illnesses, and community-wide social problems.
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Measuring self-efficacy in people with multiple scleoris: a validation study☆☆☆

TL;DR: It is concluded that MSSE is appropriate for assessing self-efficacy in the MS population and has high internal consistency and test-retest reliability, both for the overall scale and for the SE Function and SE Control subscales.
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Towers of Hanoi and London: Reliability and Validity of Two Executive Function Tasks.

TL;DR: The results revealed a significant, but relatively low, correlation between performances on the Towers of Hanoi and London, indicating that the likely source of the lack of convergence was the unreliability of the Tower of London.
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Psychopathology of incarcerated sex offenders.

TL;DR: The psychopathology and particularly the personality disorders of sex offenders were compared to general inmates of the Colorado Department of Corrections and showed the Dependent, Narcissistic, Antisocial, and Schizotypal scales to be the most differentiating.
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Relationships between measures of auditory verbal learning and executive functioning

TL;DR: Based on the present findings, attentional aspects of executive abilities appear to play a role in learning and working memory and other aspects ofexecution appear to have minimal relationships with memory processes.