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Dive into the research topics where Lori Douglas is active.

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Featured researches published by Lori Douglas.


Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry | 2002

Young adult academic outcomes in a longitudinal sample of early identified language impaired and control children.

Arlene R. Young; Joseph H. Beitchman; Carla Johnson; Lori Douglas; Leslie Atkinson; Michael Escobar; Beth Wilson

BACKGROUND The long-term academic consequences of childhood language impairment are both theoretically and clinically important. An unbiased appraisal of these outcomes, however, requires carefully designed, longitudinal research. METHOD A group of children first identified as having speech and/or language impairment in a community-based, longitudinal study at 5 years of age and matched controls were re-examined during young adulthood (age 19). A comprehensive battery of speech and language, cognitive and achievement tests, psychiatric interviews, and questionnaires were completed by subjects, their parents and teachers. RESULTS While children with early speech problems showed only a few academic differences from controls in young adulthood, early language impaired (LI) young adults lagged significantly behind controls in all areas of academic achievement, even after controlling for intelligence. Further, rates of learning disabilities (LD) were significantly higher in the LI group than both the controls and community base rates. Concurrent individual difference variables, including phonological awareness, naming speed for digits, non-verbal IQ, verbal working memory, and executive function, all contributed unique variance to achievement in specific areas. CONCLUSION Early LI rather than speech impairment is clearly associated with continued academic difficulties into adulthood. These results speak to the need for intensive, early intervention for LI youngsters.


Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology | 2004

Early Language Impairment and Young Adult Delinquent and Aggressive Behavior.

E. B. Brownlie; Joseph H. Beitchman; Michael Escobar; Arlene Young; Leslie Atkinson; Carla J. Johnson; Beth Wilson; Lori Douglas

Clinic and forensic studies have reported high rates of language impairments in conduct disordered and incarcerated youth. In community samples followed to early adolescence, speech and language impairments have been linked to attention deficits and internalizing problems, rather than conduct problems, delinquency, or aggression. This study examines the young adult antisocial outcomes of speech or language impaired children. Language impaired boys had higher levels of parent-rated delinquency symptoms by age 19 than boys without language impairment, controlled for verbal IQ and for demographic and family variables. Language impaired boys did not differ from controls in self-reported delinquency or aggression symptoms on a standardized checklist; however, language impaired boys reported higher rates of arrests and convictions than controls. Language impairment was not related to aggression or delinquency in girls. We examine alternate models of the interrelationships between language, academics, and behavior, at ages 5, 12, and 19.


Psychiatric Genetics | 2004

Association of the serotonin transporter and 5HT1Dbeta receptor genes with extreme, persistent and pervasive aggressive behaviour in children.

Kristen M. Davidge; Leslie Atkinson; Lori Douglas; Vivien Lee; Solomon Shapiro; James L. Kennedy; Joseph H. Beitchman

There is an inverse correlation between central nervous system serotonergic activity and human aggression, and aggressive traits are at least partially heritable. The present study sought to investigate the relationship between childhood aggression and polymorphisms of two serotonin system genes: the 5HT1D&bgr; receptor gene and the serotonin transporter (5HTT) gene. Fifty children with a minimum 2-year history of aggression and scores above the 90th percentile on the Aggression subscales of both the Child Behaviour Checklist and the Teachers Report Form were included in the study. All probands and locally recruited ethnically matched controls were genotyped for the 5HT1D&bgr; G861C, 5HTTLPR (promoter) and 5HTT variable number of tandem repeats (VNTR) polymorphisms. Chi-square tests revealed a significantly reduced frequency of the 5HTT VNTR 10R allele in children displaying the high-aggression phenotype compared with normal controls (P=0.039). After correction for multiple comparisons, this association reached the level of a trend but was no longer significant. Probands also demonstrated an increased 5HT1D&bgr; 861C allele frequency, but this was not statistically significant (P=0.156). 5HTTLPR was not found to be significantly associated with aggression, but our data support previous findings of an association between this polymorphism and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (P=0.025). While these preliminary findings should be interpreted cautiously, our data suggest that the 5HTT VNTR polymorphism is associated with measures of aggressive behaviour in a sample of children displaying extreme, persistent and pervasive aggression.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2003

The serotonin transporter gene in aggressive children with and without ADHD and nonaggressive matched controls.

Joseph H. Beitchman; Kristen M. Davidge; James L. Kennedy; Leslie Atkinson; Vivien Lee; Solomon Shapiro; Lori Douglas

Abstract: Using an ethnically homogeneous sample of highly aggressive Caucasian children and their matched controls, we report differential associations of the 5HTTLPR and VNTR polymorphisms with ADHD and aggression, respectively. Given the small sample size and the peliminary nature of our findings, replication is necessary.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2004

MAOA and persistent, pervasive childhood aggression

Joseph H. Beitchman; H. M. Mik; Sahar Ehtesham; Lori Douglas; James L. Kennedy

1 Baldessarini RJ et al. N Engl J Med 1991; 324: 746–754. 2 Atkin K et al. Br J Psychiatry 1996; 169: 483–488. 3 Uetrecht JP. Drug Saf 1992; 7: 52–56. 4 Williams DP et al. Mol Pharmacol 2000; 58: 207–216. 5 Mu X et al. Nucl Acids Res 2001; 29: 4983–4993. 6 Jaffer ZM, Chernoff J. Int J Biochem Cell Biol 2002; 34: 713–717. 7 Schürmann A et al. Mol Cell Biol 2000; 20: 453–461. 8 Datta SR et al. Cell 1997; 91: 231–241. 9 Nishida K, Kaziro Y, Satoh T. Oncogene 1999; 18: 407–415. 10 Yano S, Tokumitsu H, Soderling R. Nature 1998; 396: 584–587. 11 McKay MJ et al. Genomics 1996; 36: 305–315. 12 Kim MS et al. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 2001; 281: 1106–1112. MAOA and persistent, pervasive childhood aggression


American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse | 2001

COMORBIDITY OF PSYCHIATRIC AND SUBSTANCE USE DISORDERS IN LATE ADOLESCENCE: A CLUSTER ANALYTIC APPROACH

Joseph H. Beitchman; Edward M. Adlaf; Lori Douglas; Leslie Atkinson; Arlene Young; Carla J. Johnson; Michael Escobar; Beth Wilson

Cluster analysis was used to identify subgroups of youths with past-year substance and/or psychiatric disorders (N = 110, mean age 19.0 years). Data for this study came from a community-based, prospective longitudinal investigation of speech/language (S/L) impaired children and matched controls who participated in extensive diagnostic and psychosocial assessments at entry into the study at 5 years of age and again at follow-up. Clustering variables were based on five DSM diagnostic categories assessed at age 19 with the University of Michigan Composite International Diagnostic Interview. Using Wards method, the five binary variables were entered into a hierarchical cluster analysis. An iterative clustering method (K-means) was then used to refine the Ward solution. Finally, a series of analyses of variance (ANOVAs) were run to analyze group differences between clusters on measures of Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF), criminal involvement, anxiety and depressive symptomatology, and frequency of drug use and heavy drinking. The analysis yielded eight replicable cluster groups, which were labeled as follows: (a) anxious (20.9%); (b) anxious drinkers (5.5%); (c) depressed (16.4%); (d) depressed drug abusers (10%); (e) antisocial (16.4%); (f) antisocial drinkers (10%); (g) drug abusers (8.2%); (h) problem drinkers (12.7%). These groups were differentiated by external criteria, thus supporting the validity of our cluster solution. Cluster membership was associated with a history of S/L impairment: A large proportion of the depressed drug abusers and the antisocial cluster group had S/L impairment that was identified at age 5. Clarification of the developmental progress of the youths in these cluster groups can inform our approach to early intervention and treatment.


Journal of Learning Disabilities | 2001

Substance Use Disorders in Young Adults With and Without LD Predictive and Concurrent Relationships

Joseph H. Beitchman; Beth Wilson; Lori Douglas; Arlene Young; Edward M. Adlaf

This article reports on young people with and without learning disabilities (LD) and substance use disorders (SUD). Participants were assessed for LD at ages 12 and 19 and for SUD and psychiatric disorders at age 19. Participants with LD at ages 12 and 19 were more likely to develop an SUD or a psychiatric disorder compared to participants without consistent LD. Participants with LD at age 19 were more likely to have a concurrent SUD or psychiatric disorder compared to those without LD at age 19, while participants with LD at age 12 showed only a trend toward increased rates of SUD at age 19 when compared to participants without LD at age 12. Participants with and without LD did not differ in substance use, consumption levels, or onset history. In a multivariate model, adolescent LD was associated with a three-fold increased risk for SUD after behavioral problems and family structure had entered the model. Although these results provide some support for the notion that adolescents with LD are at increased risk for SUD, LD also appears to confer a general risk for adverse outcomes.


American Journal on Addictions | 2005

Psychiatric and Substance Use Disorders in Late Adolescence: The Role of Risk and Perceived Social Support

Joseph H. Beitchman; Edward M. Adlaf; Leslie Atkinson; Lori Douglas; Agnes Massak; Chris Kenaszchuk

This article explores how measures of risk and perceived social support relate to different configurations of adolescent psychopathology using data from a community-based, longitudinal investigation of 284 individuals interviewed in 1982 at age 5 and again at age 19. Discriminant analysis was used to assess differences in risk and social support variables among eight clusters of youth: anxious, anxious drinkers, depressed, depressed drug abusers, antisocial, antisocial drinkers, drug abusers, problem drinkers, and a ninth group representing those participants without a diagnosis. The results indicated that one function, defined by loadings for (low) family support and (high) early cumulative risk, accounted for the majority of between-group associations. Two groups of drug-abusing youth with multiple adjustment problems were highest on this function, while non-disordered youth and a group of participants with substance abuse alone were lowest. Findings are discussed in terms of the need to consider comorbidity when examining risk factors for later disorder.


Journal of Speech Language and Hearing Research | 1999

Fourteen-year follow-up of children with and without speech/language impairments: speech/language stability and outcomes.

Carla J. Johnson; Joseph H. Beitchman; Arlene Young; Michael Escobar; Leslie Atkinson; Beth Wilson; E. B. Brownlie; Lori Douglas; Nathan Taback; Isabel Lam; Min Wang


Journal of Clinical Child Psychology | 1999

Adolescent substance use disorders: findings from a 14-year follow-up of speech/language-impaired and control children.

Joseph H. Beitchman; Lori Douglas; Beth Wilson; Carla J. Johnson; Arlene Young; Leslie Atkinson; Michael Escobar; Nathan Taback

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Joseph H. Beitchman

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

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Beth Wilson

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

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James L. Kennedy

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

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