Overview
- Editors:
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Michael Lewis
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Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, USA
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Suzanne M. Miller
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Temple University, Philadelphia, USA
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Table of contents (37 chapters)
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Overcontrolled Disorders
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- Jerome Kagan, J. Steven Reznick, Nancy Snidman
Pages 219-226
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- Martha Putallaz, Susanne E. Dunn
Pages 227-236
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- Allan Wigfield, Jacquelynne S. Eccles
Pages 237-250
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- Laura M. Davidson, Andrew Baum
Pages 251-259
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- Dante Cicchetti, Kurt Olsen
Pages 261-279
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Depression
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Front Matter
Pages 291-291
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- Suzanne M. Miller, Adina Birnbaum, Denise Durbin
Pages 311-325
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- Patrick Burke, Joaquim Puig-Antich
Pages 327-339
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- Lynn P. Rehm, Alice S. Carter
Pages 341-351
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Specific and Pervasive Disorders
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Front Matter
Pages 353-353
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- Dante Cicchetti, Kurt Olsen
Pages 355-370
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- Patricia Howlin, William Yule
Pages 371-383
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- Margaret E. Hertzig, Theodore Shapiro
Pages 385-395
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- Ilana Attie, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn, Anne C. Petersen
Pages 409-420
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- Robert M. Liebert, Janet E. Fischel
Pages 421-429
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About this book
Developmental psychopathology is the new child on the block. As yet not an overly sturdy child, but one clearly out of the cradle, an active toddler and an enterprising explorer of the boundaries of its province. It wasn't always so. Only 15 years ago Thomas Achenbach in publishing the first edition of his book used a recently coined title, Developmental Psychopathology, and began the volume with a provoking first sentence: "This is a book about a field that hardly exists yet. " Seven years later when the second edition appeared, that sentence had been deleted. In place of the original 13-page chapter, on the "Developmental Approach to Psychopathology in Chil dren," there was a 40-page chapter focused on the biological, cognitive, social-emotional, and educational perspectives in development, together with a lengthy account of develop mental periods and an integrative statement on the constituents of a developmental framework. Other signs and symptoms began to appear. Child Development, a doyen for develop mentalists, devoted a special issue, under the guest editorship of Dante Cicchetti, to an emergent developmental psychopathology. This year saw the publication of a new journal, Development and Psychopathology (1989), edited by Cicchetti and Nurcombe. And attend ees at recent meetings of the Society for Research in Child Development can attest to the growing interest of the membership in the linkage of development and psychopathology as seen and heard via posters, symposia, and guest speakers.
Editors and Affiliations
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Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, USA
Michael Lewis
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Temple University, Philadelphia, USA
Suzanne M. Miller