1983 - Fellow of the American Psychological Association (APA)
His main research concerns Psychiatry, Developmental psychology, Conduct disorder, Clinical psychology and El Niño. His Psychiatry research includes themes of Epidemiology and Psychometrics. He has included themes like Psychopathology, Social environment and Association in his Developmental psychology study.
His Conduct disorder research includes elements of Substance abuse, Socioeconomic status, Aggression and Comorbidity. His study in the field of Distress is also linked to topics like Suicide prevention, Injury prevention and Interview. His study in El Niño is interdisciplinary in nature, drawing from both Academic achievement and Structured interview.
Developmental psychology, Conduct disorder, Clinical psychology, Psychiatry and Psychopathology are his primary areas of study. His work on Psychometrics, Juvenile delinquency, Disruptive behavior and Learning disability as part of general Developmental psychology study is frequently linked to Human factors and ergonomics, therefore connecting diverse disciplines of science. His Conduct disorder research incorporates elements of Aggression and Comorbidity.
He has researched Clinical psychology in several fields, including Personality, Association, Depression and Anxiety. The Psychiatry study combines topics in areas such as Predictive validity, El Niño, Epidemiology and Longitudinal study. His work on Child psychopathology is typically connected to Twin study as part of general Psychopathology study, connecting several disciplines of science.
His main research concerns Psychopathology, Clinical psychology, Developmental psychology, Cognitive psychology and Child psychopathology. His Psychopathology study necessitates a more in-depth grasp of Psychiatry. His Psychiatry research incorporates themes from Hierarchical database model, Contrast and Generation R.
Benjamin B. Lahey specializes in Clinical psychology, namely Conduct disorder. The study incorporates disciplines such as Confirmatory factor analysis and PsycINFO in addition to Developmental psychology. His Cognitive psychology research also works with subjects such as
Benjamin B. Lahey mainly investigates Psychopathology, Clinical psychology, Psychiatry, Developmental psychology and Child psychopathology. His Psychopathology study integrates concerns from other disciplines, such as Generation R, Physiology, Behavioural genetics and Brain size. He does research in Clinical psychology, focusing on Conduct disorder specifically.
His work carried out in the field of Psychiatry brings together such families of science as Construct validity and Validity. His Developmental psychology study combines topics from a wide range of disciplines, such as Confirmatory factor analysis and PsycINFO. Within one scientific family, he focuses on topics pertaining to Predictive validity under Depression, and may sometimes address concerns connected to Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.
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The NIMH Diagnostic Interview Schedule for Children Version 2.3 (DISC-2.3): Description, Acceptability, Prevalence Rates, and Performance in the MECA Study
David Shaffer;Prudence Fisher;Mina K. Dulcan;Mark Davies.
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (1996)
Public health significance of neuroticism.
Benjamin B. Lahey.
American Psychologist (2009)
Oppositional defiant and conduct disorder: a review of the past 10 years, part I.
Rolf Loeber;Jeffrey D. Burke;Benjamin B. Lahey;Alaina Winters.
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (2000)
DSM-IV field trials for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in children and adolescents.
Benjamin B. Lahey;Brooks Applegate;Keith McBurnett;Joseph Biederman.
American Journal of Psychiatry (1994)
Validity of DSM-IV attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptom dimensions and subtypes.
Erik G. Willcutt;Joel T. Nigg;Bruce F. Pennington;Mary V. Solanto.
Journal of Abnormal Psychology (2012)
Developmental change in attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder in boys: a four-year longitudinal study.
Elizabeth L. Hart;Benjamin B. Lahey;Rolf Loeber;Brooks Applegate.
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology (1995)
Oppositional defiant disorder and conduct disorder: A meta-analytic review of factor analyses and cross-validation in a clinic sample
Paul J. Frick;Benjamin B. Lahey;Rolf Loeber;Lynne Tannenbaum.
Clinical Psychology Review (1993)
Low salivary cortisol and persistent aggression in boys referred for disruptive behavior.
Keith McBurnett;Benjamin B. Lahey;Paul J. Rathouz;Rolf Loeber;Rolf Loeber.
Archives of General Psychiatry (2000)
Issues of taxonomy and comorbidity in the development of conduct disorder
Stephen P. Hinshaw;Benjamin B. Lahey;Elizabeth L. Hart.
Development and Psychopathology (1993)
Academic underachievement and the disruptive behavior disorders.
Paul J. Frick;Randy W. Kamphaus;Benjamin B. Lahey;Rolf Loeber.
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (1991)
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