The current study examined (1) changes in psychosocial adjustment among adolescents completing two surveys before COVID‐19 and those completing the final survey during COVID‐19 and (2) related risk/protective factors. Participants were 208 US adolescents ( M age = 15.09, SD = 0.50, 48.8% female, 86.1% White; 40.9% COVID group) who completed longitudinal surveys assessing psychosocial adjustment and related risk/protective factors (e.g., emotion regulation, well‐being pursuits). Only adolescents completing Wave 3 during COVID‐19 experienced increases in depressive symptoms, negative affect, and isolation and decreases in positive affect and friendship. Several variables served as risk (i.e., dampening) and protective (i.e., eudaimonic and hedonic motives) factors of these changes. Findings highlight the range of factors that are distinctly associated with negative changes in adolescent adjustment during COVID‐19.
College students actively felt complex objects for 3 sec, and, after delay intervals of 5, 15, 30, or 45 sec, they received either the same object or a different object for comparison. In a signal detection framework, it was observed that d' scores were significantly higher for the 5-and 15sec intervals than for the 30-and 45-sec intervals. Although a clearly negatively accelerated function was not obtained, this is one of the rare instances in which any decay function has been observed for haptic memory. Although it seems counterintuitive that the entire short-term-memory decay function occupies the narrow band extending from 15 to 30 sec, it is clear from previous studies that short-term haptic memory is unique. Results were discussed in terms of findings in both active-and passive-touch experiments.Invited speakers will include Graham Hitch, Asher Koriat, Michael Pressley, and Wolfgang Schneider. The workshop program will include oral presentations, guest speakers, and poster presentations.The registration fee is 80,000 Italian Liras for participants and 40,000 Italian Liras for students. Payment of the fee should be addressed to PSY.CO 41554/0 Cassa di Risparmio di Trieste, Sede Centrale, Via Cassa di Risparmio 10, 34100 Trieste.
To determine whether tardive dyskinesia (TD) is a single abnormal movement syndrome or multiple syndromes involving different anatomical areas, we examined 228 out-patients diagnosed with TD at the Connecticut Mental Health Center in New Haven. Application of factor analysis to the seven anatomical severity scores of the Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale yielded three statistically independent factors involving abnormal movements primarily of the jaw-tongue, face-lips, and extremities-trunk. Using logistic regression to predict the severity of these factors, we found that the severity of the orofacial scores was positively associated with age, schizoaffective or affective disorder, and living alone, while severity of non-orofacial movement was positively associated with current neuroleptic dose, non-use of psychiatric medication, and living alone. Our findings suggest that orofacial and non-orofacial dyskinetic movements may involve distinct clinical syndromes of TD, each having a different set of prognostic and, possibly, aetiological determinants.
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