
Archive for May 2025
The Marshmallow Test as a Screening Instrument: Sensitivity and Specificity of a Delay of Gratification Task for Later ADHD and Conduct Problems
Counter-radicalisation case management interventions: Findings from a Campbell systematic review
Call for Evidence: Combatting New Forms of Extremism (Due by 18 June)
Financing development at a crossroads: What’s at stake and what reforms are needed?
The relationship between racial discrimination in healthcare, loneliness, and mental health among Black Philadelphia residents
The State of Multisector Plans for Aging in 2024
A multiverse analysis examining measurement factors of potentially traumatic events that influence predictability of developmental functioning among children.
An autoethnographic exploration of the realities of engaging in trans and queer center(ed) diversity work.
Golden Years: How Americans Invented and Reinvented Old Age

Doing things intentionally: Probability raising and control
Shaping the Professionality of Secondary Teacher Candidates with Diverse Backgrounds during the Great Depression

The impact of different types of self-regulation scaffolds on learning science with hypermedia
Smart beginnings predicts reduced externalizing behavior via parental negative demeanor during discipline
Work requirements are better at blocking benefits for low-income people than they are at helping those folks find jobs

The Conversation | J Sullivan/Getty
The association between thought disturbance and suicidal ideation within and across ethnoracial groups of juvenile legal system-involved youth
How the passionate male friendship died

The Atlantic | TW Smith
We also live in an age of social fragmentation, in which experts, worried about loneliness and isolation, are puzzling over how to bring people together. To foster more connections, we’ll need to reexamine our emotional rules—which ones are worth preserving and which ones we might be better off without. As a historian, I can tell you this: If we want to reimagine the terms of friendship, we can.
Life aspirations and health in Canada: A patient-oriented study.
Perceived treatment burden and health-related quality of life in association with healthcare utilisation among patients attending multiple outpatient clinics
Building Evidence on Promising Sector Programs

How Much Have Social Security Claiming Ages Increased?
Report of the Council of University Directors of Clinical Psychology (CUDCP) burnout task force: Workload, burnout, and emotional health in clinical psychological trainees.
A scoping review examining measurement of anti-transgender stigma in low- and middle-income countries
Comprehensive scoping review on adherence to 24-hour movement guidelines and socioeconomic indicators in children and adolescents
Toddlers and Adults Link Nouns to Typical Space, but What do Infants do?
Handbook of Research on Teachers of Color and Indigenous Teachers

ADASS Care Can’t Wait: Abbie’s story (Full version)
A qualitative investigation of the feasibility and acceptability of lower risk gambling guidelines
A Writer Faces Off with Voice-to-Text

The Tyee
Things didn’t shift until my understanding of disability did. I came to understand that the way I navigated the world would have to change, and that included how I wrote.
Navigating grief in unprecedented times: risk factors in the wake of pandemic loss and end-of-life care
The association between race-based bullying and nicotine vaping in adolescents
Outdoor recreation’s association with mental health and well-being during the COVID-19 pandemic
Links between image-based sexual abuse and mental health in childhood among young adult social media users
Components of High-Quality Summer Youth Employment Programs
Empowering ChatGPT adoption in higher education: A comprehensive analysis of university students’ intention to adopt artificial intelligence using self-determination and technology-to-performance chain theories
The uses and abuses of psychodiagnostic terms in family court cases: Beyond labels to the humanity beneath
Child-centered play therapy: Process and effect with autistic children.
The potential harm of loss and grief narratives among families of transgender and nonbinary youth.
Reification of the p factor draws attention away from external causes of psychopathology
Clusters of healthy lifestyle behaviours are associated with symptoms of depression, anxiety, and psychological distress: A systematic review and meta-analysis of observational studies
Painting as a form of Material Thinking: Promoting agency and expression for people living with dementia
The distribution of technology induced job loss: Evidence from a population-wide study in Norway
2025 Palliative Care Services NSP Metadata
The relation between MIND diet with odds of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in Iranian children: a case-control study
‘We are all lumped under one umbrella of hate’: when social attitudes change, what is life like for people who don’t agree?

The Conversation | Vectorium/Shutterstock
These thoughts proved a starting point for Beyond Opposition – our project which, since 2020, has been looking at the lives of people who are reticent about or object to the perceived liberalising of societies’ sexual and gender laws in Great Britain, Ireland and Canada. The idea of this research is not to defend their positions. Nor is it to explore their politics around sexualities and genders, which we and many others do in research into anti-gender movements. Rather, we wanted to understand the experiences that might drive these politics.