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Study finds psychiatric disorders persist 15 years after youth are detained


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CHICAGO - A new study shows that youth arrested as juveniles with psychiatric disorders that remain untreated, struggle with mental health and successful outcomes well beyond adolescence.
Research from Northwestern Medicine shows nearly two-thirds of males and more than one-third of females with one or more existing psychiatric disorders when they entered detention, still had a disorder 15 years later.
The findings are significant because mental health struggles add to the existing racial, ethnic and economic disparities as well as academic challenges from missed school, making a successful transition to adulthood harder to attain.
Kids get into trouble during adolescence.Those from wealthier families also use drugs and get into fights. But these situations are most often handled informally by the school and parent, and don t culminate in arrest and detention, said lead author Linda Teplin, Owen L. Coon Professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at ....

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New study identifies a limit on the range of vocalizations that support infant cognition


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EVANSTON, Ill., - A new study by Northwestern University researchers finds that although human and non-human primate vocalizations facilitate core cognitive processes in very young human infants, birdsong does not.
Northwestern scientists in the departments of psychology at Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences and communication sciences and disorders at the School of Communication, have new evidence documenting that not all naturally produced vocalizations support cognition in infants.
The new study, Birdsong fails to support object categorization in human infants, will publish in
PLOS ONE at 1 p.m. CST, Thursday, March 11.
Ample evidence documents that infants as young as three- and four-months of age have begun to link the language they hear to the objects that surround them. Listening to their native language boosts their success in forming categories of objects (e.g., dog). Object categorization, the ability to identify commonalities among ob ....

Kali Woodruff Carr , Sandra Waxman , University Institute For Policy Research , Weinberg College Of Arts , Northwestern University , Child Development Center At Northwestern , School Of Communication , Weinberg College , Child Development Center , Hearing Speech , Social Behavioral Science , Language Linguistics Speech , Learning Literacy Reading , காளி வூட்ரஃப் கார் , சாண்ட்ரா மெழுகு , பல்கலைக்கழகம் நிறுவனம் க்கு பாலிஸீ ஆராய்ச்சி , வெயின்பெர்க் கல்லூரி ஆஃப் கலைகள் , வடமேற்கு பல்கலைக்கழகம் , குழந்தை வளர்ச்சி மையம் இல் வடமேற்கு , பள்ளி ஆஃப் தொடர்பு , வெயின்பெர்க் கல்லூரி , குழந்தை வளர்ச்சி மையம் , கேட்டல் பேச்சு , குழந்தை மருத்துவம் , சமூக நடத்தை அறிவியல் , மொழி மொழியியல் பேச்சு ,

38% of Americans lack confidence in election fairness


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38% of Americans lack confidence in election fairness
With the Georgia Senate runoff elections set for Jan. 5, 2021, a nationwide survey conducted post-election could provide insights about voter perceptions of fairness in the U.S. election and trust in democratic institutions.
Researchers from a university consortium of Northwestern, Harvard, Northeastern and Rutgers surveyed more than 24,000 individuals across the nation between Nov. 3 and 30. The survey found that overall, 38% of Americans lack confidence in the fairness of the 2020 presidential election. That number is especially high among Republicans (64%) and Trump voters (69%) compared to Democrats (11%) and Biden voters (8%).
“This level of distrust is not surprising, given political rhetoric, but it certainly is concerning. Elections are the foundation of our democracy and loss of faith in the process could undermine the new administration’s legitimacy and ability to get things done,” said ....

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