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Philip Asherson

Researcher at King's College London

Publications -  455
Citations -  34889

Philip Asherson is an academic researcher from King's College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder & Population. The author has an hindex of 91, co-authored 442 publications receiving 29480 citations. Previous affiliations of Philip Asherson include University of Cambridge & King's College.

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The unmet needs of all adults with ADHD are not the same: a focus on Europe

TL;DR: The unmet needs in adult ADHD subgroups in Europe are discussed: adolescents in transition, adult patients, employees, older adults, and those in the criminal justice system.
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Shared genetic influences on ADHD symptoms and very low-frequency EEG activity: a twin study.

TL;DR: Altered VLF activity is a potential candidate intermediate phenotype of ADHD, which warrants further investigation of underlying neurobiological and genetic mechanisms.
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A Longitudinal Twin Study of the Direction of Effects between ADHD Symptoms and IQ

TL;DR: The results suggest that ADHD symptoms may put adolescents at risk for decreased IQ scores, and persistent genetic influences seem to underlie the association of ADHD symptoms and IQ over time.
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Characteristics of prisoners with neurodevelopmental disorders and difficulties

TL;DR: There is a need for raised awareness among those working in the CJS to improve the recognition of offenders with NDD and services in the community need to work with individuals with N DD who are at risk of offending, targeting those who are homeless, unemployed and have poor employment opportunities.
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No evidence for the association of DRD4 with ADHD in a Taiwanese population within-family study

TL;DR: Investigating two markers within the DRD4 gene in a Taiwanese population, the exon 3 variable number tandem repeat (VNTR) and a 5' 120 base-pair duplication, found no evidence of association of ADHD with either polymorphism in this population was observed.