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0.0
Dec 9, 2021
12/21
Dec 9, 2021
by
Margot Van de Weijer; Perline Demange; Dirk Pelt; Meike Bartels; Michel Nivard
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Pre-Registration
Source: https://osf.io/s6gha/
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0.0
Jun 17, 2021
06/21
Jun 17, 2021
by
Lianne de Vries; Perline Demange; Dirk Pelt; Christiaan Vinkers; Michel Nivard; Meike Bartels
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Mental health is defined by the World Health Organization as “a state of well-being in which the individual realizes his or her own abilities, can cope with the normal stresses of life, can work productively and fruitfully, and is able to make a contribution to his or her community” (World Health Organization, 2005). Therefore, mental health is more than the absence of psychopathology and includes the concept of well-being. Often used definitions of well-being are a high level of positive...
Source: https://osf.io/wr3g6/
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0.0
Feb 10, 2020
02/20
Feb 10, 2020
by
Andrea Allegrini; Toos van Beijsterveldt; Dorret Boomsma; Kaili Rimfeld; Jean-Baptiste Pingault; Robert Plomin; Meike Bartels; Michel Nivard
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There is evidence that psychopathologies are the result of a developmental process, and tend to co-occur. This co-occurrence has been attributed to a common genetic etiology. However, it remains unclear whether and to what extent the correlation between psychopathologies is the product of fundamental individual differences between people on stable traits (stable across the life course, attributable to a heritable “p-factor”), or the product of a causal process within people where the...
Source: https://osf.io/ykdqf/
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0.0
Oct 11, 2019
10/19
Oct 11, 2019
by
Wonuola Akingbuwa; Anke Hammerschlag; Meike Bartels; Michel Nivard; Christel Middeldorp
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Source: https://osf.io/uyv2s/
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0.0
Jul 30, 2019
07/19
Jul 30, 2019
by
Wonuola Akingbuwa; Anke Hammerschlag; Andrea Allegrini; Hannah Sallis; Ralf Kuja-Halkola; Kaili Rimfeld; Paul Lichtenstein; Sebastian Lundstrom; Marcus Munafo; Robert Plomin; Michel Nivard; Meike Bartels; Christel Middeldorp
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Childhood psychopathology traits are complex, being affected by a large number of genetic variants, each with a small effect. They are also associated with a number of other phenotypes, both psychiatric and non-psychiatric. These associations may be explained by different mechanisms, including pleiotropy, where the same genetic variant(s) influence multiple phenotypes, or shared biological pathways. Either way, polygenic risk scores (PRS) can and have been used to investigate these...
Source: https://osf.io/7nkw8/