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2. Mapping the specific pathways to early-onset mental health disorders: The “watch me grow for REAL” study protocol

3. ParentWorks: Evaluation of an Online, Father-Inclusive, Universal Parenting Intervention to Reduce Child Conduct Problems

4. Keeping Parents Involved: Predicting Attrition in a Self-Directed, Online Program for Childhood Conduct Problems

5. Evaluating Practitioner Training to Improve Competencies and Organizational Practices for Engaging Fathers in Parenting Interventions.

6. Examining Practitioner Competencies, Organizational Support and Barriers to Engaging Fathers in Parenting Interventions

7. Development and Psychometric Evaluation of the Father Engagement Questionnaire

8. A benchmarking study of father involvement in Australian child mental health services

9. Mothers, Fathers, and Parental Systems: A Conceptual Model of Parental Engagement in Programmes for Child Mental Health—Connect, Attend, Participate, Enact (CAPE)

10. Optimising child outcomes from parenting interventions: fathers’ experiences, preferences and barriers to participation

11. Study protocol: Evaluation of an online, father-inclusive, universal parenting intervention to reduce child externalising behaviours and improve parenting practices

14. Differences in offending patterns between adolescent sex offenders high or low in callous-unemotional traits.

16. Child versus parent reports of parenting practices: implications for the conceptualization of child behavioral and emotional problems.

18. Effects of neighborhood disadvantage and peer deviance on adolescent antisocial behavior: Testing potential interactions with age-of-onset.

19. When Is the Still-Face Not the Still-Face: Mothers' Behavior in the Face-to-Face Still-Face Procedure and Its Relationship to Infant Arousal.

20. Trajectories of offending over 9 years after youths' first arrest: What predicts who desists and who continues to offend?

21. Associations Between Callous-Unemotional (CU) Traits and Emotion Recognition Abilities in School Children: The Influence of Conduct Problems and Age.

22. The Inventory of Callous-Unemotional Traits (ICU) self-report version: Factor structure, measurement invariance, and predictive validity in justice-involved male adolescents.

23. Too sensitive or not sensitive enough? Sensitivity to context and justice-involved youths' response to violence exposure.

24. Do Children with High Callous-Unemotional Traits Have Attentional Deficits to Emotional Stimuli? Evidence from a Multi-Method and Multi-Informant Study.

25. The Clinical Assessment of Prosocial Emotions (CAPE): Initial tests of reliability and validity in a clinic-referred sample of children and adolescents.

26. Inventory of Callous-Unemotional Traits (ICU) Factor Structure and Measurement Invariance in an Adolescent Multinational Sample.

27. The Moderating Role of Maternal CU Traits in the Stability of Justice-Involved Adolescents' CU Traits.

28. Dimensions of Parenting and Children's Conduct Problems: The Importance of Considering Children's Callous-Unemotional Traits.

29. Rearrest is associated with heightened callous-unemotional traits: No moderating effect of maternal relationship quality.

30. Health Service Utilization in Adolescents Following a First Arrest: The Role of Antisocial Behavior, Callous-Unemotional Traits, and Juvenile Justice System Processing.

32. Callous-Unemotional Traits and Emotion Perception Accuracy and Bias in Youths.

33. Towards Preventative Psychiatry: Concurrent and Longitudinal Predictors of Postnatal Maternal-Infant Bonding.

34. A commentary on Perlstein et al. (2023): the past and future of treating youth with limited prosocial emotions.

35. Developing Cutoff Scores for the Inventory of Callous-Unemotional Traits (ICU) in Justice-Involved and Community Samples.

36. Oppositional defiant disorder.

37. The bidirectional effects of antisocial behavior, anxiety, and trauma exposure: Implications for our understanding of the development of callous-unemotional traits.

38. Sympathetic nervous system functioning during the face-to-face still-face paradigm in the first year of life.

39. Characterizing trajectories of anxiety, depression, and criminal offending in male adolescents over the 5 years following their first arrest.

40. The Social Correlates to Callous-Unemotional Traits in a Sample of High School Students.

41. Proactive and reactive aggression: Developmental trajectories and longitudinal associations with callous-unemotional traits, impulsivity, and internalizing emotions.

42. The reciprocal relations between well-being and maternal and peer warmth in adolescents involved in the juvenile justice system.

43. The Brief Adolescent Depression Screen: A Brief Screening Tool for Depression and Suicidal Behavior in Inpatient Adolescents.

44. The Mood Disorder Assessment Schedule: Initial validation of a new measure for early identification of bipolar spectrum disorders in inpatient adolescents.

45. Perceived sleep quality predicts aggressive offending in adolescence and young adulthood.

46. A Comparison of Parent, Teacher, and Youth Ratings on the Inventory of Callous-Unemotional Traits.

47. Parent Training Adapted to the Needs of Children With Callous-Unemotional Traits: A Randomized Controlled Trial.

48. Drug Use Homophily in Adolescent Offenders' Close Friendship Groups.

49. Assessing general versus specific liability for externalizing problems in adolescence: Concurrent and prospective prediction of symptoms of conduct disorder, ADHD, and substance use.

50. Some critical considerations in applying the construct of psychopathy to research and classification of childhood disruptive behavior disorders.

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