2015
Children’s obsessive compulsive symptoms and fear-potentiated startle responses
Borelli J, Ruiz S, Crowley M, Mayes L, De los Reyes A, Lewin A. Children’s obsessive compulsive symptoms and fear-potentiated startle responses. Journal Of Obsessive-Compulsive And Related Disorders 2015, 6: 101-107. DOI: 10.1016/j.jocrd.2015.06.006.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchObsessive-compulsive symptomsOC symptomsObsessive-compulsive disorderStartle responseCompulsive symptomsNon-clinical community sampleFear-potentiated startle responseEmotion regulation processesStartle magnitudeEmotion regulation difficultiesPhysiological fear responsesHigher OC symptomsGreater subjective distressSchool-aged childrenRegulation difficultiesContext insensitivityInnocuous situationsHighest startle magnitudesFear responsesSubjective distressCommunity sampleCompulsive disorderLevel of threatRegulation processesYouth
1998
Regulation of arousal and attention in preschool children exposed to cocaine prenatally.
Mayes L, Grillon C, Granger R, Schottenfeld R. Regulation of arousal and attention in preschool children exposed to cocaine prenatally. Annals Of The New York Academy Of Sciences 1998, 846: 126-43. PMID: 9668402.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsPrenatal cocaine exposureArousal regulationRegulation of arousalCocaine exposureAged childrenCocaine-exposed childrenFace of noveltyOngoing information processingSubstance-abusing familiesAttention regulationCocaine-exposed infantsEmotional reactivityImpaired attentionStructured tasksNeurobehavioral findingsStressful situationsInformation processingHuman infantsNeurophysiological findingsPreschool childrenArousalSuch childrenStartle responseStress circuitsNeurobehavioral effectsRegulation of Arousal and Attention in Preschool Children Exposed to Cocaine Prenatally
Mayes L, Grillon C, Granger R, Schottenfeld R. Regulation of Arousal and Attention in Preschool Children Exposed to Cocaine Prenatally. Annals Of The New York Academy Of Sciences 1998, 846: 126-143. PMID: 29087549, DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1998.tb09731.x.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsPrenatal cocaine exposureArousal regulationRegulation of arousalCocaine exposureAged childrenCocaine-exposed childrenFace of noveltyOngoing information processingSubstance-abusing familiesAttention regulationCocaine-exposed infantsEmotional reactivityImpaired attentionStructured tasksNeurobehavioral findingsStressful situationsInformation processingHuman infantsNeurophysiological findingsPreschool childrenArousalSuch childrenStartle responseStress circuitsNeurobehavioral effects