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Journal ArticleDOI

Society and the Adolescent Self-Image

D. J. Lee
- 01 May 1969 - 
- Vol. 3, Iss: 2, pp 280-280
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This article is published in Sociology.The article was published on 1969-05-01. It has received 16312 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Child and adolescent psychiatry.

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Single versus multi-type maltreatment: An examination of the long-term effects of child abuse.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify the long-term impacts of different types of child abuse and assess differential effects of single versus multi-type maltreatment and highlight the importance of considering all types of abuse when studying child maltreatment.
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Changes in materialism, changes in psychological well-being: Evidence from three longitudinal studies and an intervention experiment.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined how changes in materialistic aspirations related to changes in well-being, using varying time frames (12 years, 2 years, and 6 months), samples (US young adults and Icelandic adults), and measures of materialism and wellbeing.
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The reliability of the twelve-item general health questionnaire (GHQ-12) under realistic assumptions

TL;DR: Conventional psychometric assessments using factor analysis and reliability estimates have obscured substantial measurement error in the GHQ-12 due to response bias on the negative items, which limits its utility as a screening instrument for psychiatric morbidity.
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Using the implicit association test to measure age differences in implicit social cognitions.

TL;DR: Results show that the IAT provided theoretically meaningful insights into age differences in social cognitions that the explicit measures did not, supporting the value of the I AT in aging research and illustrating that age-related slowing must be considered in analysis and interpretation of IAT measures.
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Young- versus older-onset Parkinson's disease: impact of disease and psychosocial consequences

TL;DR: It is concluded that young‐onset patients more frequently experience loss of employment, disruption of family life, greater perceived stigmatization, and depression than do older‐onsets patients with PD.