S
Stephen V. Faraone
Researcher at State University of New York Upstate Medical University
Publications - 1470
Citations - 155368
Stephen V. Faraone is an academic researcher from State University of New York Upstate Medical University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder & Bipolar disorder. The author has an hindex of 188, co-authored 1427 publications receiving 140298 citations. Previous affiliations of Stephen V. Faraone include University of Bergen & National Institute for Health Research.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The effects of increasing resource demand on vigilance performance in adults with schizophrenia or developmental attentional/learning disorders: a preliminary study
L.J. Seidman,K.-J Van Manen,Winston M. Turner,D.M Gamser,Stephen V. Faraone,Jill M. Goldstein,Ming T. Tsuang +6 more
TL;DR: The hypothesis that patients with schizophrenia have insufficient information processing resources to cope with higher processing demands on effortful attention tasks is supported.
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Targeting the dopamine system in the treatment of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder.
TL;DR: A review highlights the current central role of dopamine in the pathophysiology and treatment of ADHD and implications for future advances in diagnosis and treatment.
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Convergence between structured diagnostic interviews and clinical assessment on the diagnosis of pediatric-onset mania
Janet Wozniak,Michael C. Monuteaux,Jennifer Richards,Kathryn E. Lail,Stephen V. Faraone,Joseph Biederman +5 more
TL;DR: In children referred for evaluation of suspected bipolar disorder, a structured interview diagnosis of mania is very likely to be corroborated by a clinical interview.
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Neurocognitive Predictors of ADHD Outcome: a 6-Year Follow-up Study
Marloes van Lieshout,Marjolein Luman,Jos W. R. Twisk,Jos W. R. Twisk,Stephen V. Faraone,Stephen V. Faraone,Dirk J. Heslenfeld,Catharina A. Hartman,Pieter J. Hoekstra,Barbara Franke,Jan K. Buitelaar,Nanda Rommelse,Jaap Oosterlaan +12 more
TL;DR: Results showed that better working memory predicted lower ADHD symptom severity, and less reaction time variability predicted better overall functioning, and the role of neurocognitive functioning in the long term outcome of ADHD behavior is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Integrated analysis of gray and white matter alterations in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
Winke Francx,Alberto Llera,Maarten Mennes,Marcel P. Zwiers,Stephen V. Faraone,Jaap Oosterlaan,Dirk J. Heslenfeld,Pieter J. Hoekstra,Catharina A. Hartman,Barbara Franke,Jan K. Buitelaar,Christian F. Beckmann +11 more
TL;DR: Previous unimodal structural MRI findings are replicated and extended by demonstrating that prefrontal, parietal, and occipital areas, as well as fronto-striatal andFronto-limbic systems are implicated in ADHD.