This is a new core. It was designed to respond to the review committee's comments regarding maintaining focused management of the Center's research mission, questions about the appropriateness of the methodology/Statistics Core assuming centerwide statistical analyses and apparent difficulties locating information. The Scientific Core is composed of Dr. TARTER (pi), Dr. Clark (Co-PI; Director of the Clinical Core), Dr. Levent Kirisci, Ph.D. (Director of the Methodology Statistics Core) Dr. Ada Mezzich, Ph.D. (Co-PI: Director of the Computing and Information Systems Core), and Dr. Robert Ammerman, Ph.D. (Modules Coordinator). These individuals direct the research mission of the Center spanning subject identification to archiving data and publications. The Scientific Core, through bi-weekly meetings will monitor scientific progress toward achieving the centerwise specific aims. The Core members will be responsible for monitoring and overseeing the Center's research mission. Progress in the administrative domain of reach Scientific Core member will be reported in the bi-weekly Core's meetings. Topics include subject recruitment and follow-up (CISC), diagnostic formulation (Clinical Core), construct development, psychometric analyses, and statistical analysis (Methodology/Statistics Core) and emerging research findings from each module. A summary report is prepared for the management Team within the Administrative Core that is also displayed on the shared directory for review by all CEDAR personnel. Though these activities, the Center's investigative mission is expeditiously implemented.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Type
Specialized Center (P50)
Project #
2P50DA005605-11A1
Application #
6321717
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZDA1-RXL-E (02))
Project Start
1989-05-01
Project End
2002-08-31
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
11
Fiscal Year
2000
Total Cost
$123,636
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Pittsburgh
Department
Type
DUNS #
053785812
City
Pittsburgh
State
PA
Country
United States
Zip Code
15213
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Marceau, Kristine; Kirisci, Levent; Tarter, Ralph E (2018) Correspondence of Pubertal Neuroendocrine and Tanner Stage Changes in Boys and Associations With Substance Use. Child Dev :
Vanyukov, Michael M; Nimgaonkar, Vishwajit L; Kirisci, Levent et al. (2018) Association of cognitive function and liability to addiction with childhood herpesvirus infections: A prospective cohort study. Dev Psychopathol 30:143-152
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Halliburton, Amanda E; Ridenour, Ty A; White, Bradley A et al. (2017) Clinically differentiating life-course-persistent and adolescence-limited conduct problems: Is age-of-onset really enough? J Appl Dev Psychol 52:34-45
Bastian, Jaime R; Chen, Huijun; Zhang, Hongfei et al. (2017) Dose-adjusted plasma concentrations of sublingual buprenorphine are lower during than after pregnancy. Am J Obstet Gynecol 216:64.e1-64.e7
Eckert, Scott; Feingold, Eleanor; Cooper, Margaret et al. (2017) Variants on chromosome 4q21 near PKD2 and SIBLINGs are associated with dental caries. J Hum Genet 62:491-496
Rabinowitz, Jill A; Osigwe, Ijeoma; Byrne, Ashley et al. (2017) Father- and Youth-Reported Family Affective Expression Differentially Predicts Youth Internalizing and Externalizing Symptoms. J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol :1-14
Schwantes-An, Tae-Hwi; Zhang, Juan; Chen, Li-Shiun et al. (2016) Association of the OPRM1 Variant rs1799971 (A118G) with Non-Specific Liability to Substance Dependence in a Collaborative de novo Meta-Analysis of European-Ancestry Cohorts. Behav Genet 46:151-69
Rabinowitz, Jill A; Drabick, Deborah A G; Reynolds, Maureen D (2016) Youth Withdrawal Moderates the Relationhips Between Neighborhood Factors and Internalizing Symptoms in Adolescence. J Youth Adolesc 45:427-39

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