Archive for April 2019
From the Profound to the Mundane: Questionnaires as Emerging Technologies in Autism Genetics
A Protective Model for Suicidal Behaviors in American and Pakistani College Students
Ethics and positionality in qualitative research with vulnerable and marginal groups
The Social and Emotional Impact of Involving Individuals With Mental Illness in the Research Process
Growing Up in the Digital Age: Early Learning and Family Media Ecology
Corrigendum: Aggression Toward Sexualized Women Is Mediated by Decreased Perceptions of Humanness
Cognitive Modeling Suggests That Attentional Failures Drive Longer Stop-Signal Reaction Time Estimates in Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
Smoking rates in marginalised groups is a social justice issue: Professor Lisa Brophy
The Role of Emotion Regulation in the Relationship Between Trauma and Health-Related Outcomes
The role of the natural environment in disaster recovery: “We live here because we love the bush”
After a School Tragedy. . . Readiness, Response, Recovery, & Resources
The relationship between intuitive eating and body image is moderated by measured body mass index
Beyond Generational Politics: Do Millennials Constitute a Political Category?
Implementation of provider payment system reforms in the age of universal health coverage: a realist review of evidence from Asian developing countries
Controversies in applying the Abortion Act to Down syndrome
My Childhood Neighborhood: A Critical Autoethnography
The Shifting Architecture of Cognition and Brain Function in Older Adulthood
Public Service-Function Types and Interlocal Agreement Network Structure: A Longitudinal Study of Iowa
Outcomes of CPC-CBT in Sweden Concerning Psychosocial Well-Being and Parenting Practice: Children’s Perspectives
Group body psychotherapy for the treatment of somatoform disorder – a partly randomised-controlled feasibility pilot study
Peering down the Memory Hole: Censorship, Digitization, and the Fragility of Our Knowledge Base
Briefly, Chinese knowledge platforms comparable to JSTOR are stealthily redacting their holdings, and globalizing historical narratives that have been sanitized to serve present political purposes.