July 2011 Curriculum Vitae Lauren S. Wakschlag, Ph.D. Abbot Hall, Suite 729 Email: [email protected]710 North Lake Shore Drive Phone: 312‐503‐9807 Chicago, Illinois 60611 Fax: 312‐503‐9800 EDUCATION 1976‐1980 Bachelor of Arts with Major in Psychology, Barnard College (Columbia University) 1980‐1983 Master of Arts in Clinical Social Work, School of Social Service Administration, The University of Chicago 1984‐1992 Ph.D., Department of Psychology Committees on Human Development and Mental Health Research, The University of Chicago PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE 1988‐1990 Clinical Psychology Intern, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry The University of Chicago 1990‐1992 Fellow, The Parent‐Infant Development Service, Department of Psychiatry, University of Chicago 1992‐2005 Director, Parent‐Infant Development Service Department of Psychiatry, The University of Chicago 1993‐1996 Instructor of Clinical Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, The University of Chicago 1994‐June, 2005 Director, Preschool Behavior Problems Clinic Department of Psychiatry, The University of Chicago 1996‐2003 Assistant Professor of Psychiatry Department of Psychiatry, The University of Chicago 1994‐ Illinois State Licensure July, 2003‐June, 2005 Associate Professor of Psychiatry Department of Psychiatry, University of Chicago
23
Embed
Curriculum Vitae Lauren S. Wakschlag, Ph.D. · Curriculum Vitae Lauren S. Wakschlag, Ph.D. ... and Clinical Psychology, American Journal of Public Health, Journal ... This study is
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
July 2011
Curriculum Vitae
Lauren S. Wakschlag, Ph.D. Abbot Hall, Suite 729 Email: [email protected] 710 North Lake Shore Drive Phone: 312‐503‐9807 Chicago, Illinois 60611 Fax: 312‐503‐9800 EDUCATION 1976‐1980 Bachelor of Arts with Major in Psychology, Barnard College
(Columbia University) 1980‐1983 Master of Arts in Clinical Social Work, School of Social Service Administration, The University of Chicago 1984‐1992 Ph.D., Department of Psychology
Committees on Human Development and Mental Health Research, The University of Chicago
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE 1988‐1990 Clinical Psychology Intern, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry The University of Chicago 1990‐1992 Fellow, The Parent‐Infant Development Service, Department of Psychiatry, University of Chicago 1992‐2005 Director, Parent‐Infant Development Service Department of Psychiatry, The University of Chicago 1993‐1996 Instructor of Clinical Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, The University of Chicago 1994‐June, 2005 Director, Preschool Behavior Problems Clinic Department of Psychiatry, The University of Chicago 1996‐2003 Assistant Professor of Psychiatry Department of Psychiatry, The University of Chicago 1994‐ Illinois State Licensure July, 2003‐June, 2005 Associate Professor of Psychiatry Department of Psychiatry, University of Chicago
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
2
July, 2005‐August, 2006 Visiting Associate Professor Institute for Juvenile Research, Department of Psychiatry University of Illinois at Chicago July, 2005‐ Director, Program on Developmental Mechanisms of
Psychopathology & Preschool Program of IJR Disruptive Behavior Clinic Institute for Juvenile Research, Department Psychiatry, University of Illinois at Chicago
September, 2006‐ Associate Professor (with tenure) June, 2009 Institute for Juvenile Research, Department of Psychiatry University of Illinois at Chicago July, 2009‐ Professor (with tenure) January, 2010 Institute for Juvenile Research, Department of Psychiatry University of Illinois at Chicago February 2011 Professor (with tenure) Department of Medical Social Sciences, Feinberg School of
Medicine & Faculty Fellow, Institute for Policy Research Northwestern University February 2010‐ Associate Chair for Scientific Development & Institutional December 2010 Collaboration, Department of Medical Social Sciences, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University Fall, 2010‐ Professor of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Human
Development & Social Policy and Psychology January 2011‐ Vice Chair for Scientific & Faculty Development, Department of Medical Social Sciences, Feinberg School of
Medicine, Northwestern University HONORS, AWARDS, AND FELLOWSHIPS Phi Beta Kappa, Barnard College, 1979 Honors in Psychology, Barnard College, 1980 Summa Cum Laude, Psychology, Barnard College, 1980 Fellow, Harris Center for Developmental Studies, The University of Chicago, 1987‐88 Fellow, National Center for Clinical Infant Programs, 1989‐91 Fellow, Illinois Association of Infant Mental Health, 1990‐91
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
3
Recipient, Herschel Thornberg Dissertation Award, Society for Research in Adolescence, 1994 Fellow, APA Div 53 (Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology), 2008‐ PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES National Review Groups and Committees 2001 Ad Hoc Member, NIH IRG RPHB‐1 2001 Special Emphasis Panel, NIH IRG RPHB‐4 2003 NIDA‐K, the Training and Career Development Review Committee 2001‐ Chair, Subcommittee on Preschool Disruptive Behavior Disorders, American
Psychiatry Association/American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Working Group on Preschool Diagnosis
2002‐ NIMH Working Group on the State of the Science in Early Childhood Psychopathology
2004‐ Member, DSM‐V Working Group on Infant & Preschool Diagnosis 2007 Member, Special Emphasis Panel, NIDA Genes, Environment, Development
Initiative (GEDI) 2010‐2011 Special Emphasis Panels, NIH IRG RPHB Journal Reviewer: Developmental Psychology, Archives of General Psychiatry, Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, Journal of Research on Adolescence, JAMA, Development and Psychopathology, Neurotoxicology and Teratology, Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, American Journal of Public Health, Journal of Pediatric Psychology, Pediatrics, Journal of Child Psychology, Psychiatry & Allied Disciplines, Biologic Psychiatry, American Journal of Psychiatry, Journal of Adolescent Health, Nicotine & Tobacco Research Editorial Board Membership: Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience FUNDED RESEARCH ACTIVITIES ACTIVE 1R01MH082830 (Wakschlag) 2/10/09‐2/09/14 NIH/NIMH (PI) Developmental characterization of preschool disruptive behavior This study is designed to test a developmentally‐informed dimensional approach to characterizing the phenotype of disruptive behavior at preschool age. IRT modeling will be used to generate a multi‐dimensional, maximally‐informative model of preschool disruptive behavior. External validation of the dimensions will occur in relation to direct observation of behavior and discrete neurodevelopmental mechanisms. Validity of the model will be tested and compared to traditional DSM DBD categorical diagnoses.
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
4
3R01MH082830‐02S1 3/01/10‐2/29/12 (no cost extension) NIH/NIMH Recovery Act Administrative Supplement (Wakschlag) (PI) Developmental Characterization of Preschool Disruptive Behavior This administrative supplement focuses on accelerating the tempo of the parent grant by incorporating developmentally‐appropriate neuroimaging via event related potentials (ERPs) in the validation of the four dimensions of disruptive behavior in preschoolers. R01DA023653‐01A‐2 (Wakschlag/Espy) 4/1/09‐3/31/14 NIH/NIDA (Multiple PIs, Wakschlag originating PI) Prenatal smoking and the substrates of disruptive behavior in early life. This study is designed as a preschool follow‐up of Dr. Espy’s neonatal sample, oversampled for prenatal exposure to cigarettes. This study aims to specify the relations of exposure to phenotypic and endophenotypic patterns via developmentally‐sensitive, multi‐level methods. The complex interface of exposure, genotype and parenting are examined. R01Da023653‐03S1 (Wakschlag/Espy) 2/1/11‐1/31/13 NIH/NIDA (Diversity Supplement, J. Garza) Prenatal smoking and the substrates of disruptive behavior in early life. This study is designed as a preschool follow‐up of Dr. Espy’s neonatal sample, oversampled for prenatal exposure to cigarettes. This study aims to specify the relations of exposure to phenotypic and endophenotypic patterns via developmentally‐sensitive, multi‐level methods. The complex interface of exposure, genotype and parenting are examined. 2 P01 CA098262‐06A1 (R. Mermelstein) 09/01/10‐08/03/15 NIH/NCI $2,012,389 (Directs Year 1) (Co‐investigator) Patterns and predictors of smoking from adolescence to young adulthood This competitive renewal is designed to examine social emotional influences on smoking patterns in the transition to adulthood, in conjunction with genetic influences. 1R01 MH090301‐01 (M. Briggs‐Gowan) 09/08/10‐05/31/15 NIH/NIMH (Co‐investigator) A translational approach to modeling violence exposure effects: Mechanisms of clinical risk This grant draws on the MAPS Study Sample of 3,700 preschoolers to model effects of violence exposure within a demographically diverse sample. Directly observed clinical patterns and neurocognitive mechanisms assessed including the use of event‐related potential (ERP). 1R21DA027624‐01 (V. Dukic) 10/1/09‐9/30/12 NIH/NIDA (Co‐investigator) Translational approaches to multilevel models of prenatal exposure to cigarettes This project focuses on Bayesian modeling integrating bioassays and self‐reports of
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
5
prenatal smoking. We test the improved precision in estimation of prediction of outcomes, including integration of variation in nicotine metabolism genotype. 1R01 HD060711. (R. Gordon) 1/1/10‐12/31/12 NIH/NICHD (Co‐investigator) Child health, cognition and behavior: Domain‐specific estimates of the effects of the child care quality using several large scale datasets. This grant uses secondary data analysis to model the effects of child care quality (assessed via multi‐level measurement including direct observation) on behavioral and cognitive trajectories of preschool children.
R21MH080929 (C. Hill) 7/5/105/31/12 NIH/NICHD (Co‐investigator) A Multidimensional Model of Parental Social Cognitive Processes: Implications for Parenting This exploratory/developmental grant focuses on validation of multidimensional model of parental social cognitive processes and its relation to parenting within the MAPS study sample. PENDING R01 DA032553‐01 (J. Fang/ V. Dukic) 9/1/11‐8/31/14 NIH/NICHD Calibration and Clustering (CalClust) of Tobacco Smoking Exposure in Pregnancy The purpose of this grant is to develop novel methods for integrating multi‐level exposure data to enhance precision of measurement and prediction. The study draws on Dr. Wakschlag’s NIDA‐funded samples. 1K01‐MH096041‐01 (M. Smith, PI) Pending NIH/NICHD Investigating Functional Outcome, Neurocognition, and Empathy in Schizophrenia (IFONES) (Co‐Mentor) This study will examine how neurocognitive and empathy deficits in schizophrenia influence their functional outcomes. It also will conduct a pilot social cognitive intervention to improve empathy deficits in schizophrenia patients. TRAINING GRANTS & CONSULTANCIES F32 MH084459‐01 (M. Yasui) 9/1/08‐8/31/11 NIH/NIMH (Sponsor) Standardized clinical observation: Catalyst for culturally responsive engagement. This postdoctoral fellowship grant is designed to test the use of the DB‐DOS during clinical feedback as a tool for enhancing clinician cultural sensitivity and family engagement in preschool disruptive behavior interventions.
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
6
1 K08 MH074588‐01A2 (M. Bosquet, PI) 04/01/07 ‐ 03/31/12 NIH/NIMH (Consultant) Reactivity and regulation in the intergenerational transmission of PTSD This study examines the role of maternal trauma and problem behavior in the development of infant dysregulation. 1 R01 MH092118‐01A1 (J. Neiderhiser, L. Leve PIs) 9/28/10‐8/31/15 NIH/NIMH (Consultant) Gene‐environment interplay and development of psychiatric symptoms in children The investigators will utilize an adoption design to examine the interplay between genetic, prenatal, and postnatal environmental influences on early pathways to conduct, anxiety, and depressive problems by (a) conducting a psychiatric assessment of adopted children between 6.0 and 7.5 years of age and (b) conducting a psychiatric assessment of adoptive parents. COMPLETED 1R01 MH068455 (Wakschlag) 02/01/04‐06/30/10 NIH/NIMH (PI) Observational measurement of preschool behavior problems The focus of this grant is validation of the Disruptive Behavior Diagnostic Observation Schedule (DB‐DOS), a new diagnostic observation method for the assessment of disruptive behavior disorders in preschoolers. Emphasis is on characterization that provides parameters for distinguishing normative misbehavior from clinical problems in young children. 1R01DA15223 (Wakschlag) 02/01/03‐01/31/10 NIH/NIDA (PI) Prenatal smoking and patterns of youth problem behavior This grant was designed to examine potential mechanisms by which prenatal exposure to cigarettes and problem behaviors in youth are linked: by identifying the salient parameters of exposure associated with increased risk, examining the specific types and patterns of problem behavior associated with exposure, including exploration of sex differences, and examining the moderational role of family context in these pathways. The study also includes a neuroscience supplement to examine gene‐exposure interaction and social information processing as putative endophenotypes. 1P01 CA98262 9/01/04‐08/31/10 (no cost extension) NIH/NCI (Wakschlag, PI of R01, Mermelstein PI of P01) Developmental influences on adolescent smoking patterns (P01: Social and emotional contexts of adolescent smoking patterns) This R01 is embedded in a program project, which is a cohort study designed to examine the multi‐level influence of social‐emotional contexts (family, peer and neurophysiologic) on adolescent smoking trajectories. The focus of the R01 is on using observational methodology to delineate the role that parent‐adolescent interactions play in protecting
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
7
against or increasing risk of smoking in adolescents at high‐risk for regular smoking. The study also examines whether quality of co‐occurring problem behavior moderates the effects of family processes on youth smoking escalation. 1R21 MH074780‐01 (Leventhal, PI) 06/01/06‐05/31/09 NIH/NIMH (Co‐investigator, Member, Network Executive Committee) Neural substrates of preschool psychopathology This provides support for a Translational Research Network of basic, clinical, developmental and neuroscientists. It is designed to advance understanding of preschool emotional and behavioral disorders and their neural substrates. 1R01 MH62437 (Keenan, PI) 4/1/02‐ 3/31/07 NIH/NIMH (Co‐ investigator) Validity of preschool disruptive behavior disorders The major goal of this project is to test the concurrent and predictive validity of preschool disruptive behavior disorders in low income preschoolers. Dr. Wakschlag’s role is to oversee all aspects of the study related to parenting and observational assessment. 1K08 DA0030 (Wakschlag) 09/01/97‐08/30/02 NIH/NIDA (PI) Prenatal smoking and preschool behavior problems This career development award was designed to increase Dr. Wakschlag’s expertise in measurement of prenatal exposure and the conduct of longitudinal research. The study prospectively examines the effects of smoking during pregnancy, utilizing biochemical and self‐report measures of exposure, on infant behavioral vulnerabilities in the first two years of life. 1R03 DA14334 (K. Pickett, PI) 09/01/01‐08/31/03 NIH/NIDA (Co‐investigator) Patterns of maternal smoking during pregnancy. This grant was designed to develop measurement methods for classifying maternal smoking patterns during pregnancy. The study involves secondary data analysis of data collected in The Maternal‐Infant Smoking Study of East Boston (MISSEB) a population‐based cohort study with repeated, prospective, biologic and self‐reported measurement of exposure. 1R40 MC00203 (Hans, PI) 08/31/00‐07/30/04 MCH (Co‐Investigator) Doula support for young mothers: A randomized trial. The focus of this grant was to test the effectiveness of a doula intervention for low‐income teenage mothers for improving emotional and behavioral health of the young mothers and their infants. Maternal problem behavior history will be examined as a possible moderator of treatment effects.
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
8
PUBLICATIONS Peer‐Reviewed Journal Articles
1. Wakschlag, L., Cook, H., Hammond, D., Leventhal, B., and Hopkins, J. (1991). Autism and tuberous sclerosis. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disabilities, 21, 95‐97.
2. Chase‐Lansdale, P.L., Wakschlag, L., and Brooks‐Gunn J. (1995). A psychological perspective on the development of caring in children and youth: The role of the family. Journal of Adolescence, 18, 515‐556.
3. Wakschlag, L., Chase‐Lansdale, P.L., and Brooks‐Gunn, J. (1996). Not just “ghosts in the
nursery”: Contemporaneous intergenerational relationships and parenting in young, African‐American families. Child Development, 67, 2131‐2147. 4. Wakschlag, L., and Leventhal, B. (1996). Consultation with young autistic children.
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 35, 963‐965.
5. Wakschlag, L., Lahey, B., Loeber, R., Green, S., and Leventhal, B. (1997). Maternal smoking during pregnancy and the risk of conduct disorder in boys. Archives of General Psychiatry, 54,670‐676.
6. Wakschlag, L., and Hans, S. (1999). Relation of maternal responsiveness during
infancy to the development of behavior problems in high‐risk youths. Developmental Psychology, 35, 569‐579.
7. Keenan, K. and Wakschlag, L. (2000). More than the terrible twos: The nature and
severity of behavior problems in clinic‐referred preschoolers. Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 28, 33‐46.
8. Wakschlag, L., Gordon. R., Lahey, B., Loeber, R., Green, S., and Leventhal, B. (2000).
Maternal age at first birth and the risk of conduct disorder in boys. Journal of Research on Adolescence, 10, 417‐441.
9. Wakschlag, L. and Keenan, K. (2001). Clinical significance and correlates of
disruptive behavior symptoms in environmentally at risk preschoolers. Journal of Clinical Child Psychology, 30, 262‐275.
10. Wakschlag, L. & Hans, S. (2002). Maternal smoking during pregnancy and conduct
problems in high‐risk youth: A developmental framework. Development and Psychopathology, 14, 351‐369.
11. Wakschlag, L., Leventhal, B., Pickett, K., Cook, E., & Benowitz, N. (2002). Maternal
smoking during pregnancy and severe antisocial behavior in offspring: A review. American Journal of Public Health, 92, 966‐974.
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
9
12. Keenan, K., & Wakschlag, L. (2002). Can a valid diagnosis of disruptive behavior
disorder be made in preschool children? American Journal of Psychiatry, 59, 351‐358.
13. Wakschlag, L., Pickett, K., Middlecamp, M., Walton, L., Tenzer, P. & Leventhal, B.
(2003). Pregnant smokers who quit, pregnant smokers who don’t: Does history of problem behavior make a difference? Social Science and Medicine, 56, 2449‐2460.
14. Pickett, K., Wakschlag, L., Rathouz, P., Leventhal, B., & Abrams, B. (2004). The
working class context of smoking during pregnancy. Health and Place, 8, 167‐175.
15. Pickett, K., Wakschlag, L., Dai, L., & Leventhal, B. (2003). Fluctuations of maternal smoking during pregnancy. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 101, 140‐147.
16. Task Force on Research Diagnostic Criteria: Infancy and Preschool (2003).
Research diagnostic criteria for infants and preschool children: The process and empirical support. Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry. 42, 1504‐1512.
17. Middlecamp Kodl , M. & Wakschlag, L. (2004). Does a childhood history of
externalizing problems predict smoking during pregnancy? Addictive Behaviors. 29, 273‐279.
18. Keenan, K. & Wakschlag, L. (2004). Are ODD and CD symptoms normative
behaviors in preschoolers? A comparison of referred and non‐referred children. American Journal of Psychiatry, 161, 356‐358.
19. Pickett, K., Rathouz, P., Kasza, K., Wakschlag, L., & Wright, R. (2005). Self‐reported
smoking, cotinine levels and patterns of smoking during pregnancy. Paediatric & Perinatal Epidemiology, 19, 368‐376.
20. Wakschlag, L., Leventhal, B., Briggs‐Gowan, M., Danis, B., Hill, C., Keenan, K., Egger,
E., Cicchetti, D., & Carter, A. (2005). Defining the “disruptive” in preschool behavior: What diagnostic observation can teach us. Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review, 8, 183‐200.
21. Wakschlag, L., Pickett, K., Kasza, K., & Loeber, R. (2006). Is maternal smoking
during pregnancy associated with a developmental pattern of conduct problems in young boys? Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 45, 461‐467.
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
10
22. Wakschlag, L., Leventhal, B., Pine, D., Pickett, K. & Carter, A. (2006). Elucidating early mechanisms of developmental psychopathology: The case of prenatal smoking and disruptive behavior. Child Development, 77, 893‐906.
23. Hill, C., Stein, J., Keenan, K., & Wakschlag, L. (2006). Mothers’ childrearing history
and current parenting: Patterns of association and the role of current life stress. Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, 35, 412‐419.
24. Dukic, V., Niessner, M., Benowitz, N., Hans, S. & Wakschlag, L. (2007). Modeling the
relationship of cotinine and self‐reported measures of maternal smoking during pregnancy: A deterministic approach. Nicotine and Tobacco Research, 9, 453‐466.
25. Keenan, K., Wakschlag, L., Danis, B., Hill, C., Humphries, M., Duax, J. & Smith‐Donald,
R. (2007). Further evidence of the reliability and validity of DSM‐IV ODD and CD in preschool children. Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry,46, 457‐468.
26. Wakschlag, L., Briggs‐Gowan, M, Carter, A., Hill, C., Danis, B., Keenan, K., McCarthy,
K., & Leventhal, B. (2007). A developmental framework for distinguishing disruptive behavior from normative misbehavior in preschool children. Journal of Child Psychology, Psychiatry & Allied Disciplines (Special issue on Preschool Mental Health), 48, 976‐987.
differences in maternal smoking behavior during pregnancy: Implications for infant behavioral vulnerability. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 62, 318‐324.
28. Wakschlag, L., Hill, C., Carter, A., Danis, B., Egger, H., Keenan, K., Leventhal, B.,
Cicchetti, D., Maskowitz, K., & Briggs‐Gowan, M. (2008). Observational assessment of preschool disruptive behavior: Part I: Reliability of the Disruptive Behavior Diagnostic Observation Schedule (DB‐DOS). Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 47, 622‐631.
29. Wakschlag, L., Briggs‐Gowan, M., Hill, C., Danis, B., Leventhal, B., Egger, H., Keenan,
K., Cicchetti, D., Maskowitz, K., & Carter, A. (2008). Observational assessment of preschool disruptive behavior: Part II: Validity of the Disruptive Behavior Diagnostic Observation Schedule (DB‐DOS). Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry,47, 632‐641.
30. Hill, C., Maskowitz, K., Danis, B., Keenan, K., Burns, J., & Wakschlag, L. (2008).
Validation of a clinically sensitive observational coding system for parenting behaviors: The Parenting Clinical Observation Schedule (P‐COS) Parenting: Science & Practice, 8, 53 ‐ 185.
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
11
31. Weaver, K., Mermelstein, R., Campbell, D., & Wakschlag, L. (2008). Pregnancy smoking in context: The influence of multiple levels of stress. Nicotine and Tobacco Research, 10, 1‐9.
32. Pickett, K., Rathouz, P., Dukic, V., Kasza, K., Niessner, M., Wright, R., & Wakschlag, L
(2008). The complex enterprise of modelling prenatal exposure to cigarettes: What is “enough?” Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology, 23, 160‐170.
33. Pickett, K., Wilkinson, R., & Wakschlag, L. (2009). The psychosocial context of
pregnancy smoking and quitting in the Millennium Cohort Study. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 63, 474‐480.
34. Wakschlag, L., Kistner, E., Pine, D., Biesecker, G., Pickett, K., Skol, A., Dukic, V., Leventhal, B., Cox, N., Burns, J., Wright, R., & Cook, E. (2010). Interaction of prenatal exposure to cigarettes and MAOA genotype in pathways to youth antisocial behavior. Molecular Psychiatry, 15, 928‐937.
35. De Los Reyes, A., Henry, D., Tolan, P. & Wakschlag, L. (2009) Linking informant
discrepancies to observed variations in young children’s disruptive behavior. Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 37, 637‐652.
36. Pickett, K., Kasza, K., Biesecker, G., Wright, R., & Wakschlag, L. (2009). Women who
remember, women who don’t: A methodologic study of maternal recall of smoking during pregnancy. Nicotine & Tobacco Research, 11, 1166‐1174.
37. Dukic, V., Niessner, M., Pickett, K., Benowitz, N., & Wakschlag, L. (2009). Calibrating
self‐reported measures of maternal smoking in pregnancy via bioassays using a Monte Carlo approach. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 6, 1744‐1759.
38. Hutchinson, J., Pickett, K., Green., J., & Wakschlag, L. (2009). Smoking in pregnancy and behavioural problems in 3‐year‐old boys and girls: An Analysis of the UK Millennium Cohort Study. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 64, 1‐7.
39. Jacobs, R., Pine, D. Schoeny, M., Henry, D., Gollan, J., Moy, G., Cook, E., & Wakschlag,
L. (2010). Maternal depressive history, teen 5HTT genotype and the processing of emotional faces: Exploring mechanisms of risk. Behavior Research and Therapy, 49, 80‐84.
40. Fang, H., Johnson, C., Chevalier, N., Stopp, C., Wiebe, S., Wakschlag, L., & Espy, K. (2010). Using propensity score modeling to minimize the influence of confounding risks related to prenatal tobacco exposure. Nicotine & Tobacco Research, 12, 1211–19.
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
12
41. Metzger, A., Dawes, N., Wakschlag, L. S., & Mermelstein, R. (2011) Modeling
Longitudinal Pathways from Adolescent Organized Activity Involvement and Problem Peer Associations to Youth Smoking. Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology, 32, 1‐9.
42. Wakschlag, L. S., A. Metzger, et al. (2011). The Family Talk About Smoking (FTAS)
Paradigm: New Directions for Assessing Parent‐Teen Communications About Smoking. Nicotine & Tobacco Research, 13, 103‐112.
43. Wakschlag, L., (2011). Unpacking the association: Individual differences in the relation of prenatal exposure to cigarettes and disruptive behavior phenotypes. Neurotoxicology and Teratology, 33, 145‐155.
Manuscripts Submitted and Under Revision: McGrath, L.M.., Mustanski, B., Metzger, A., Pine, D.S., Kistner‐Griffin, E., Cook, E., Wakschlag,
L. (2011). A Latent Modeling Approach to Genotype‐Phenotype Relationships: Maternal Problem Behavior Clusters, Prenatal Smoking, and MAOA Genotype.
Gray, S., Carter, A., Briggs‐Gowan, M., Hill, C., Keenan, K., Danis, B. & Wakschlag, L. (2011).
Preschool children’s observed disruptive behavior: Variations across sex, interactional context and disruptive behavior severity.
Wakschlag, L., Henry, D., Tolan, P., Carter, A., Burns, J., & Briggs‐Gowan, M. (2011). Does a
developmentally‐sensitive, multidimensional approach to disruptive behavior have added value?: An examination in early childhood.
INVITED PAPERS: Wakschlag, L., Leventhal, B., Cook, E. & Pickett, K. (2000). Intergenerational health consequences of maternal smoking. The Economics of Neuroscience (TEN), 2, 47‐54. Wakschlag, L. Tobacco consumption during pregnancy and its impact on child
development: Comments on Fergusson and Fried. In: Tremblay RE, Barr RG, Peters RDeV, eds. Encyclopedia on Early Childhood Development [online]. Montreal, Quebec: Centre of Excellence for Early Childhood Development; 2003:1‐6. Available at: http://www.excellence‐jeunesenfants.ca/documents/WakschlagANGxp.pdf.
in preschool children: Characterizing heterotypic continuities for a developmentally informed nosology for DSM V. In W. Narrow, M. First, P. Sirovatka & D. Regier (Eds.), Age and gender considerations in psychiatric diagnosis: A research agenda for DSM‐V (pp. 243‐258). Arlington, VA: American Psychiatric Association.
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
13
Wakschlag, L., & Leventhal, B. (2007). Commentary: Measurement of psychopathology
under the age of six. In W. Narrow, M. First, P. Sirovatka & D. Regier (Eds.), Age and gender considerations in psychiatric diagnosis: A research agenda for DSM‐V (pp. 184‐185). Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Association.
Danis, B., Hill, C., & Wakschlag, L. (2009). In the eye of the beholder: Critical components of
observation when assessing disruptive behaviors in young children. Zero‐to‐Three,29, 24‐30.
Wakschlag, L., Tolan, P. & Leventhal, B. (2010). Research Review: ‘Ain’t misbehavin’: Towards a developmentally‐sensitive nosology for preschool disruptive behavior. Journal of Child Psychology & Psychiatry, 51, 3‐22.
Chacko, A., Wakschlag, L., Hill, C., Danis, B. & Espy, K. (2009). Viewing preschool disruptive
behavior and ADHD through a developmental lens: What do we know and what do we need to know? Clinics of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry of North America, 18, 627‐643.
Dirks, M., De Los Reyes, A., Briggs‐Gowan, M., Cella, D., & Wakschlag, L. (forthcoming). Embracing not erasing: Implications of variations in methods and informants for developmental psychopathology. Journal of Child Psychology & Psychiatry.
Wakschlag, L., Briggs‐Gowan, M., Choi, S., Hullseik, H., Burns, J., Leibenluft, E. & Carter, A.
(in preparation). Defining the parameters of temper loss in preschool children: Implications for a developmental understanding of psychopathology. Journal of Child Psychology & Psychiatry.
BOOK CHAPTERS Chase‐Lansdale, P.L., Gordon, R., Coley, R, Wakschlag, L., and Brooks‐Gunn, J. (1999).
Young African‐American multigenerational families in poverty. The contexts, exchanges and processes of their lives (pp. 165‐192). In E.M. Hetherington (Ed.), Coping with Divorce, Single Parenting and Remarriage: A Risk and Resiliency Perspective. Mahwah, N.J. Erlbaum.
Wakschlag, L., & Hans, S. (2000). Early parenthood in context: Implications for
development and intervention (pp. 129‐142). In C. Zeanah (Ed.), Handbook of Infant Mental Health (2nd ed.) New York: Guilford.
Wakschlag, L. & Danis, B. (2004). Assessment of disruptive behavior in young children: A
clinical/developmental framework (pp. 421‐442). In R. Del Carmen‐Wiggins and A. Carter (Eds.), Handbook of Infant and Toddler Mental Health Assessment. Oxford Press: NY.
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
14
Wakschlag, L., & Danis, B. (in press). Characterizing early childhood disruptive behavior: Enhancing developmental sensitivity. In C. Zeanah (Ed.), Handbook of Infant Mental Health (3rd edition). New York: Guilford.
Pickett, K., & Wakschlag, L. (in press). The short‐term and long‐term developmental
consequences of maternal smoking during pregnancy. In P. Preece & E. Riley (Eds.), Drugs in pregnancy‐the price for the child: Exposure to foetal teratogens and long‐term neurodevelopmental outcome. London, UK: MacKeith Press, Royal Society of Medicine.
Pittman, L., Wakschlag, L., Chase‐Lansdale, P. L., & Brooks‐Gunn, J. (in press). "Mama, I'm a
person, too": Individuation and young African‐American mothers' parenting competence. In A. M. Cauce & S. Hauser (Eds.), Adolescence and beyond: Family processes and development. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
INSTRUMENTS DEVELOPED Wakschlag, L. & Keenan, K. (1996). Parental Responsiveness and Child Behavior Coding
System. Unpublished manual, University of Chicago. Wakschlag, L., Chase‐Lansdale, P.L., & Brooks‐Gunn, J. (2001). The Scale of
Intergenerational Relationship Quality (SIRQ). In J. Touliatos, B. Perlmutter, and G. Holden (Eds.), Handbook of Family Measurement Techniques (2nd edition), pp. 70‐71. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Wakschlag, L., Leventhal, B., Danis, B., Keenan, K., Egger, H., Hill & Carter, A. (2002). The
Disruptive Behavior Diagnostic Observation Schedule (DB‐DOS), Version 1.2. Unpublished manual, University of Chicago.
Wakschlag, L., Hill, C., Danis, B., Grace, D., & Keenan, K. (2004). The Parenting Clinical
Observation Schedule (PCOS): Manual for Coding Parenting Behavior During the DB‐DOS Version 1.1. Unpublished manual, University of Chicago.
Keenan, K.,Wakschlag, L. & Danis, B. (2002). The Kiddie‐Disruptive Behavior Disorders
Schedule for Preschool Children (Kiddie‐DBDS). Unpublished manual, University of Chicago.
Wakschlag, L., Shernoff, E., Danis, B., Hill, C., Stein, J. & Leventhal, B. (2005). Consensus
diagnosis procedures manual: Procedures for assessing preschool disruptive behavior within developmental context. Unpublished manual, Institute for Juvenile Research, Department of Psychiatry, University of Illinois at Chicago.
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
15
Wakschlag, L., Darfler, A., Ho, J & Grace, D. (2005). Family Talk about Smoking (FTAS): A novel paradigm for assessing parent‐adolescent smoking‐specific communications. Unpublished manual, Institute for Juvenile Research, Department of Psychiatry, University of Illinois at Chicago.
Danis, B., Wakschlag, L., Hill, C., Shernoff, E., Chacko, A., Humprhies, H. & Keenan, K.
(2006). Parents In Charge (PIC): Manual for parent‐child intervention with disruptive preschoolers. Unpublished manual, Institute for Juvenile Research, Department of Psychiatry, University of Illinois at Chicago.
PUBLISHED LETTERS AND ABSTRACTS Wakschlag, L., Pickett, K., & Leventhal, B. (2000). Re: The association between maternal
cigarette smoking and psychiatric diseases or criminal outcome in offspring. Reproductive Toxicology (Let.), 579‐580.
Rao, D., Schreiber, J., Middlecamp, M., Walton, L., Pickett, K., Leventhal, B., & Wakschlag, L.
(2001). The relation of maternal smoking during pregnancy to infant attention and behavioral regulation. Nicotine and Tobacco Research,3,A277.
Wakschlag, L., Pickett, K., & Leventhal, B. (2001). Smoking during pregnancy: Problematic
health behavior or behavior problem? American Journal of Epidemiology, S244, 907. Pickett, K., Wakschlag, L., & Leventhal, B. (2001). Maternal smoking during pregnancy:
Not a stable phenomenon. Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology, 15, A27. Keenan, K. & Wakschlag, L. (2003). Re: Psychiatric diagnoses in preschoolers. Journal of
the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 42, 129‐130. SCIENTIFIC PRESENTATIONS Wakschlag, L., Chase‐Lansdale, P.L., and Brooks‐Gunn, J. (September 1992). Assessment
of young mother/grandmother interactions. Paper presented at the Fifth Annual Meeting of the World Association of Infant Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines, Chicago, Illinois.
Wakschlag, L., Chase‐Lansdale, P.L., and Brooks‐Gunn, J. (November 1993).
Multigenerational family processes: Their influence on parenting in African‐American young mother families. Paper presented in the symposium “The role of the grandmother in ethnically diverse multigenerational families: Implications for policy and practice” at the Second National Head Start Research Conference, Washington, DC.
Wakschlag, L., Lahey, B., Loeber, R., Green, S., and Leventhal B. (October 1995). Maternal smoking during pregnancy increases offspring’s risk of conduct disorder. Paper presented at the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Meetings,
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
16
New Orleans, Louisiana. Wakschlag, L., Chase‐Lansdale, P.L., and Brooks‐Gunn, J. (March 1996). Multi‐ generational relationships and family structure: Their interactive effects on young African‐American mothers’ parenting. Paper presented in the symposium: “Policy implications of adolescents’ parenting within a family context”, Society for Research on Adolescent Meetings, Boston, Massachusetts. Wakschlag, L., and Hans, S. (October 1996). Maternal insensitivity increases risk of
behavior problems in high risk youth. Paper presented at the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Meetings, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Martin, K., Reyes, R., Stone, A., Wakschlag, L., and Keenan, K. (November 1996).
Intergenerational continuities in behavioral regulation: Links to young children’s behavior problems. Paper presented at the meetings of Zero‐to‐Three, National Center for Clinical Infant Programs, Washington, DC.
Lahey, B., Wakschlag, L., Loeber, R., Leventhal, B., and Green, S. (November 1996).
Maternal smoking during pregnancy is an independent risk factor for conduct disorder in their offspring. Paper presented at the meetings of the American Society for Criminology, Chicago, Illinois.
Dupre, D., Keenan, K., and Wakschlag, L. (April 1997). Parenting stress and discipline Strategies: Relations to preschool behavior problems. Paper presented at the
Society for Research in Child Development Meetings, Washington, DC. Wakschlag, L., and Hans, S. (April 1997). Relationship of early parenting to the
development of disruptive behavior disorders in high‐risk youth. Paper presented at the Society for Research in Child Development Meetings, Washington, DC.
Thornton, G., Stein, J., Martin, K., and Wakschlag, L. (July, 1997). Evaluating the efficacy of
a brief group treatment for behavior problems in toddlers and preschoolers. Paper presented at the meetings of Zero‐to‐Three, National Center for Infants, Toddlers
and Families, Nashville, Tennessee. Steele, E., Komosa, K., Bohnert, A., Wakschlag, L., and Keenan, K. (October 1998).
Evaluation of a developmental approach to the treatment of preschoolers with behavior problems. Paper presented at the meetings of the Illinois Association for Infant Mental Health, Chicago, Illinois.
Keenan, K., Shaw, D., and Wakschlag, L. (May 1999). Precursors to antisocial behavior:
Uncovering possible markers in the preschool period. Paper presented at the Workshop on Early Precursors of Anti‐Social Behavior, National Research Council, Institute of Medicine, Washington, DC.
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
17
Wakschlag, L., and Keenan, K. (February 1999). Disruptive behavior in clinic‐referred preschoolers. Methods and correlates. Paper presented at the NIMH Conference on Assessing Risk Factors and Psychopathology in Young Children, Clearwater Beach, Florida.
Wakschlag, L., and Hans, S., (March 1999). Prenatal smoking and conduct problems in
youth. Paper presented at the meetings of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco, San Diego, California.
Wakschlag, L., Gordon, R., Lahey, B., Loeber, R., Green, S.C., and Leventhal, B. (October
1999). Teenage parenthood and conduct disorder in offspring. Paper presented in the symposium, “Findings from the Developmental Trends Study” at the Meetings of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Chicago, Illinois.
Middlecamp, M., Wakschlag, L., Pickett, K., Walton, L., Cavanaugh, A., Stone, A., &
Leventhal, B. (August 2000). Who are the pregnant smokers?: Psychosocial and psychiatric characteristics. Paper presented at the meetings of the World Health Organization, Chicago, Illinois.
Wakschlag, L., (October 2000). Developmental pathways from prenatal smoking to
offspring behavior problems. Paper presented in the symposium “ Smoking during pregnancy and offspring conduct disorder: Cause or correlation” (L. Wakschlag, Chair) at the meetings of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, New York, New York.
Burke, J., Wakschlag, L. & Loeber, R. (October 2000). Childhood predictors of
psychopathy in young adulthood. Paper presented at the meetings of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, New York, New York.
Pickett, K., Wakschlag, L, Loeber, R., Stouthamer‐Loeber, M., Lahey, B., & Leventhal, B.
(November 2000). Multigenerational effects of maternal smoking during pregnancy. Paper presented at the meetings of the American Public Health Association, Boston, Massachusetts.
Rao, D., Schreiber, J., Middlecamp, M., Walton, L., Pickett, K., Leventhal, B., & Wakschlag, L.
(March 2001). The relation of maternal smoking during pregnancy to infant attention and behavioral regulation. Paper presented at the Meetings of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco, Seattle, Washington.
Middlecamp, M., Wakschlag, L., Pickett, K., Walton, L., Rao, D., Schreiber, J., & Leventhal, B.
(March 2001). Does a history of problem behavior distinguish women who smoke while pregnant from those who spontaneously quit? Paper presented at the Meetings of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco, Seattle, Washington.
Wakschlag, L., Pickett, K., & Leventhal, B. (June 2001). Smoking during pregnancy:
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
18
Problem behavior or behavior problem? Paper presented at the Congress of Epidemiology 2001 Meetings, Toronto, Canada.
Pickett, K., Wakschlag, L., & Leventhal, B. (June 2001). Maternal smoking during
pregnancy: Not a stable phenomenon. Paper presented at the Meeting of the Society for Pediatric and Perinatal Epidemiologic Research, Toronto, Canada.
Wakschlag, L. (February 2002). Early developmental mechanisms: Prenatal smoking,
infant behavior and the early parenting of pregnant smokers. In the symposium “Maternal smoking during pregnancy and adverse offspring outcomes: What can babies tell us about biobehavioral mechanisms (L. Stroud, Chair). Paper presented at the Meetings of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco, Savannah, Georgia.
Whiteside‐Mansell, L., Wakschlag, L., Moore, T. & Hans, S. (July 2002). Confirmatory factor
analysis of the SIRQ, an observational measure of intergenerational relationships. Paper presented at the Meetings of the International Society for the Study of Behavior and Development, Ottawa, Canada.
Wakschlag, L. (July 2002). “Maternal problem behavior, parenting and toddler
aggression.” In the symposium “The role of prenatal smoking and parental sensitivity in the intergenerational transmission of aggression and antisocial behavior”
(M. Zoccolillo, Chair). Presented at the Meetings of the International Society for Research on Aggression, Montreal, Canada.
Wakschlag, L. (July 2002). “The Disruptive Behavior Diagnostic Observation Schedule
(DB‐DOS): A structured clinical observation tool for the assessment of early conduct problems.” In the symposium “Developmental approaches to assessing aggression in young children” (K. Keenan, Chair). Presented at the Meetings of the International Society for Research on Aggression, Montreal, Canada.
Massetti, G, Ehrenreich, J., Keenan, K. & Wakschlag, L. (August 2002). Correlates of
disruptive behavior problems in at‐risk preschoolers with and without comorbid anxiety. Paper presented at the American Association for the Advancement of Behavior Therapy.
Massetti, G., Chronis, A., Keenan, K. & Wakschlag, L. (June, 2003). Correlates of ADHD in
Urban Low‐Income Preschoolers Referred for Disruptive Behavior Disorders. Paper presented at the ISRCAP Meetings, Sydney, Australia.
Hill, C., Keenan, K., Danis, B & Wakschlag, L. (August, 2003). The use of clinical observation
in the assessment of disruptive behavior in preschool children. Paper presented at the meetings of the American Psychological Association, Toronto, Canada.
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
19
Humphries, M., Duax, J., Hill, C., Strickland, J., Keenan, K. & Wakschlag, L. (May, 2004). Competence among clinically referred and non‐referred preschool children. Paper presented at the International Conference on Infant Studies, Chicago, Il.
Wakschlag, L (May, 2004). Patterns of emerging disruptive behavior in infants and
toddlers prenatally exposed to cigarettes. Presented in the Symposium “Cocaine and tobacco use during pregnancy: Adverse outcomes in offspring” (V. Smeriglio, Chair) at the Meetings of the American Psychiatry Association, New York, New York.
Wakschlag, L. (October, 2004). Parents’ emotion regulating behaviors and preschoolers’
negative emotions. Paper presented in an invited Institute “Young Children’s Emotion Regulation and Psychopathology” (H. Egger and N. Fox, Chairs), at the Meetings of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Washington, DC.
Wakschlag, L., Leventhal, B., Hill, C., Danis, B. & Keenan, K. (October, 2004). Observed
disruptive behavior in the parent‐child context and impairment. Paper presented in the symposium “Beyond diagnosis: Persistence and impairment in young children’s psychopathology” (A. Carter, Chair) at the Meetings of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Washington, D.C.
Wakschlag, L., Leventhal, B., Hill, C., Danis, B. & Keenan, K. (April, 2005). When is it more
than the terrible twos? : What diagnostic observation can teach us. Paper presented in the symposium “Assessing preschool psychopathology in developmental context: Methodologic and clinical issues (B. Leventhal, Chair) at the Meetings of the Society for Research in Child Development, Atlanta, Georgia.
Hill, C., Maskowitz, K., Keenan, K., Danis, B. & Wakschlag, L. (April, 2005). Mapping
observed and self—reported parenting: Explaining differences. Poster presented at the Meetings of the Society for Research in Child Development, Atlanta, Georgia.
Strickland, J., Maskowitz, K., Keenan, K., & Wakschlag, L. (May, 2005). Cognitive
functioning and disruptive behavior in preschool children: Understanding individual symptoms and their prevalence across contexts. Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago, Il.
Humphries, M., Strickland, J., Young, E., Brown, A., Nieves, M., Keenan, K. & Wakschlag, L.
(August, 2005). Preschoolers’ competence at school: Influences of teacher and parent support. Poster presented at the Annual Conference of the American Psychological Association, Washington, DC.
Hart, K., Chen, D., Keenan, K. & Wakschlag, L. (August, 2005). Effects of maternal
depressive symptoms and parenting on preschool child disruptive behaviors in a low income predominantly minority sample. Poster presented at the Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Washington, DC.
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
20
Weaver, K., Mermelstein, R., Campbell, D., & Wakschlag, L. (March, 2006). The influence
of multiple levels of context on maternal smoking during pregnancy. Poster presented at the Meetings of the Society for Behavioral Medicine, San Francisco, CA.
Pickett, K., Dukic, V., Rathouz, P., Kasza, K., Weaver, K., Niessner, M., & Wakschlag, L.
(September, 2006). The complex enterprise of modeling prenatal exposure to cigarettes: What is “enough?” paper submitted for the symposium “Measuring in‐utero exposures in longitudinal child studies: What, why, how and when” at the Joint Conference of the International Society for Environmental Epidemiology and The International Society of Exposure Analysis, Paris, France.
Wakschlag, L. (July, 2006). Prenatal smoking and child behavioral problems: The first
years of life as a window on mechanism. Invited paper presented at NIDA‐sponsored symposium “Nicotine Exposure During Pregnancy: How Does it Relate to Later Behavioral Problems” at the World Conference on Tobacco or Health, Washington, DC.
Maskowitz, K., Kampani, S., Hill, C., Leventhal, B., Keenan, K., & Wakschlag, L. (August,
2006). Differentiating disruptive behavior disorders in preschoolers: The role of aggression. Poster presented at the Meetings of the American Psychological Association, New Orleans, LA.
Shernoff, E., Hill, C., Danis, B., Leventhal, B., Keenan, K. & Wakschlag, L. (August, 2006). A
manualized approach for clinical decision making in multi‐method assessments. Poster presented at the Meetings of the American Psychological Association, New Orleans, LA
Wakschlag, L., & Danis, B. (October, 2006). Widening the lens: Developmental
methodology, clinical practice and prevention. In P. Tolan, Chair, “Embracing the tension of translation in clinical research.” Paper to be presented at symposium at the Meetings of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, San Diego, CA.
Wakschlag, L., Leventhal, B., Pine, D., Pickett, K. & Carter, A. (October, 2006). Prenatal
smoking and precursors to disruptive behavior in toddlers. In B. Leventhal, Chair, “Modeling of multi‐level mechanisms of risk for early emerging disruptive behavior.” Paper presented in symposium at the Meetings of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, San Diego, CA.
Danis, B. & Wakschlag, L. (October, 2006). Developmentally sensitive assessment of
disruptive behavior disorders in preschool children. Paper to be presented in Institute Chair, “Psychiatric assessment of preschoolers: Practical models and methods and tips for clinicians (H. Egger, Chair) at the Meetings of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, San Diego, CA.
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
21
Biesecker, G., Frey, M., Clarke, S. & Wakschlag, L. (March, 2007). Adolescent secure base
behaviors and emotion regulation. Poster presented at the meetings of the Society for Research in Child Development, Boston, MA.
Boeldt, D., Coyne, C., Wakschlag, L. & Keenan, K. (March, 2007). Maternal childhood, but
not adult, antisocial behavior is associated with preschoolers’ disruptive behavior problems. Presented at the Meetings of the Society for Research in Child Development, Boston, MA.
Espy, L., & Wakschlag, L., (May, 2007). Prenatal smoking and patterns of disruptive
behavior across development. Paper presented at NIDA‐sponsored symposium, American Psychiatric Association Meetings, San Diego, CA.
Wakschlag, L. (August, 2007). Unpacking the association: Prenatal smoking and
dimensions of disruptive behavior across developmental periods. In K. Espy, Chair, Mechanisms of prenatal smoking and behavior. Symposium at the meetings of the American Psychological Association, San Francisco, CA.
Metzger, A., Mermelstein, R., & Wakschlag, L. (February, 2008). Examining exposure to
smoking peers as an explanatory mechanism. Paper presented at the meeting of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco, Portland, OR.
Wakschlag, L., Metzger, A.,& Darfler, A. (February, 2008). “What I say and what I do”:
What can we learn from direct observation of family discussions about smoking. In R. Mermelstein, Chair, Integrating laboratory, field, and observational methods to examine the social‐emotional contexts of adolescent smoking. Symposium at the meetings of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco, Portland, OR.
Wakschlag, L., Metzger, A., & Darfler, A. (March, 2008). “Family Talk”: Individual
differences in parent‐teen smoking communications. In R. Mermelstein, Chair, Social‐Emotional Contexts of Adolescent Smoking Patterns. Symposium presented at the meetings of the Society for Research on Adolescence, Chicago, IL.
Metzger, A., Wakschlag, L., Flores, Z., Price, J. (June, 2008). Parental solicitation and
adolescent information management of smoking activities: Communication behaviors coded from parent‐adolescent interactions. In S. Bosacki, Chair, Sex, Drugs, Cigarettes and Rebellion. Paper presented at The 38th Annual Meeting of the Jean Piaget Society, Quebec City, Canada.
Wakschlag, L. (October, 2008). The phenotype of early emerging disruptive behavior:
Patterns and distinctions from normative misbehavior in early childhood. Child Psychiatry Institute, (K. Pope, Chair). The origins of antisocial behavior: A developmental perspective. Paper presented at the Meetings of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Chicago, Il.
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
22
Wakschlag, L., Briggs‐Gowan, G., Carter, A., Hill, C., Danis, B., Keenan, K., Egger, H., &
Leventhal, B. (October, 2008). Multifaceted observations of preschool disruptive behavior: Incremental utility and individual differences in patterns of prediction. In A. Angold, Chair, Longitudinal prediction of preschool psychopathology. Paper presented at the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Chicago, Il.
Wakschlag, L. (December, 2008). Interaction of prenatal smoking and MAOA in pathways
to youth aggression. Paper presented in symposium, J. Fowler & N. Alia‐Klein (Chairs), On aggression, stress, smoking and the monoamines at the Meetings of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology, Scottsdale, AZ.
Espy, K., Wakschlag, L., Wiebe, S., & Sheffield, T., (February, 2009). The impact of prenatal
tobacco exposure on neuropsychological substrates of dimensions of ADHD. Paper presented at the International Neuropsychological Society, Atlanta, GA.
Kistner, E., Wakschlag, L., Pine, D., Skol, A., & Cook, E. (April, 2009). MAOA genotype and
prenatal exposure to smoking interact to predict youth conduct disorder symptoms. In S. Wiebe, Chair, Prenatal tobacco exposure: Effects on neurobehavioral outcomes across development. Paper presented at the Meetings of the Society for Research in Child Development, Denver, CO.
Carter, A., Briggs‐Gowan, M., McCarthy, K., & Wakschlag, L. (April, 2009). Developmental
patterns of normative misbehavior in early childhood: Implications for identification of early disruptive behavior. Paper presented in the symposium, The evolution of disruptive behavior problems in young children (R. Baillargeon, Chair) at the Meetings of the Society for Research in Child Development, Denver, CO.
Wakschlag, L. (September, 2009). Clinical symptom or normative misbehavior of early
childhood? Towards a developmentally‐specified nosology for preschool disruptive behavior. Northwestern University Warren Wright Lecture, Children’s Memorial Hospital, Chicago, Il.
Jacobs, R., Wakschlag, L., Cook, E. & Pine, D. (November, 2009). The processing of affective
faces and the intergenerational transmission of depression. Poster presented at the Annual Meeting of the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies, New York, NY.
Kopald, B., Hill, C., Wallace, A., Leibenluft, E., Briggs‐Gowan, M., Fox, N., Pine, D., Carter, A., &
Wakschlag, L. (October, 2009). Associations between dimensions of disruptive behavior and specific deficits in facial processing. Paper presented at the Meetings of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Hawaii.
Metzger, A., Price, J., Flores, Z., & Wakschlag, L. (March, 2010). Adolescent information
management and illicit substance use: Observed patterns in parent/adolescent discussions of smoking. In C. Daddis (chair), Information Management in Everyday
Wakschlag, Lauren S.
23
Contexts: Adolescent’s Reasoning about Disclosure. Symposium conducted at The 13th Biennial Meeting of the Society for Research on Adolescence, Philadelphia, PA.
Metzger, A., Flores, Z., Price, J., & Wakschlag, L. (March, 2010). Domain‐specific
communication about cigarette smoking: Messages coded from observed parent‐adolescent interactions. Paper to be presented in the symposium “Do as I say not as I do: Multi‐method approaches to studying parental communication about substance use” (A. Metzger & W. Kliewer, Chairs) at the Meetings of the Society for Research in Adolescence, Philadelphia, PA.
Dunifon, R., Kopoko, K., Chase‐Lansdale, L., Wakschlag, L., & Darfler, A. (August, 2010).
Youth being raised by grandparents: Family processes and narratives. Paper presented at the Annual Convention of the American Psychological Association, San Deigo, CA.
Hill, C., Danis, B., Herriott, A., Guerrero, A., & Wakschlag, L. (April, 2011). “History of
maltreatment and current parenting: The moderating effects of social cognitive processes.” Society for Research in Clinical Development, Montreal, Canada.
Richmond, M.J., Mermelstein, R.J., & Wakschlag, L. (April, 2011). Parenting style predicts long‐term daily affect in adolescent smokers. Poster session at the Meeting of the Society of Behavioral Medicine, Washington DC. Richmond, M.J., Mermelstein, R.J., & Wakschlag, L. (June, 2011). The longitudinal effects of
general and smoking‐specific parent‐child communication on adolescent smoking. Poster session at the Meeting of the Society for Prevention Research, Washington DC.