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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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Structural brain abnormalities among relatives of patients with schizophrenia: implications for linkage studies.

TL;DR: The nonpsychotic relatives of schizophrenic patients show deviant values on MRI measures of brain structure and the distribution of these deviations among relatives and controls suggests that if these results can be replicated, an MRI-derived phenotype could be useful for genetic linkage and association analyses.
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Mathematical models of complex dose‐response relationships: Implications for experimental design in psychopharmacologic research

TL;DR: A mathematical model is developed to account for the complex relationship between drug dose and clinical response in psychopharmacologic research which indicates that random assignment to two fixed doses is more powerful and less sensitive to heterogeneity than assignment to clinically determined doses.
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Influence of Parental SUD and ADHD on ADHD in their Offspring: Preliminary Results from a Pilot-controlled Family Study

TL;DR: The results of this study seem to suggest that the offspring of SUD or ADHD parents are at elevated risk for ADHD compared to controls, highlighting the need for careful screening of this group of youth for ADHD.
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Genome-wide linkage analysis of heroin dependence in Han Chinese: results from wave one of a multi-stage study.

TL;DR: Forthcoming results from other groups and from two additional waves of ascertainment should be able to support or refute the putative susceptibility loci the authors have identified, after which positional candidate genes can be further evaluated as risk factors for the illness.
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A genome-wide scan of symptom dimensions in bipolar disorder pedigrees of adult probands

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used principal components factor analysis followed by a varimax rotation was used to extract symptom dimensions, including depression, psychosis, sleep disturbances, psychomotor acceleration, and irritability.