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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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The Familial Co-Aggregation of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder and Intellectual Disability: A Register-Based Family Study

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that nearly all of the comorbidity between ADHD and ID can be attributed to genetic factors, which has implications for diagnostic practice.
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Gene-set and multivariate genome-wide association analysis of oppositional defiant behavior subtypes in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder

TL;DR: Inadequate parenting behavior was significantly associated with all ODD dimensions and subtypes, most strongly with defiant/vindictive behaviors, and the GWAS did not result in genome‐wide significant findings but bioinformatics and literature analyses revealed that the proteins encoded by 28 of the 53 top‐ranked genes functionally interact in a molecular landscape centered around Beta‐catenin signaling and involved in the regulation of neurite outgrowth.
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Phenomenology of childhood psychosis: findings from a large sample of psychiatrically referred youth.

TL;DR: In conclusion, childhood-onset psychosis in referred youth is common and highly morbid and remains an important topic of research deserving full clinical and scientific attention.
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Informativeness of child and parent reports on substance use disorders in a sample of ADHD probands, control probands, and their siblings.

TL;DR: Evaluated parent-child agreement on psychoactive substance use disorder (PSUD) reporting among children with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and test whether agreement level could be predicted from measures of parent and child psychopathology and substance use severity found it to be possible.
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Gender and the familial risk for schizophrenia: Disentangling confounding factors

TL;DR: Results showed that the effect of gender on the transmission of schizophrenia could not be explained by gender differences in age at onset, symptom expression, premorbid history, and winter birth, however, premOrbid history had an effect on familial risk independent of gender, indicating that probands with a poor premor bid history had a lower familial risk for schizophrenia than those with a good premorbrid history.