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Aktuelle Appointments und Affiliationen
Prof. Dr. Lilly Shanahan ist ausserordentliche Professorin ad personam für «Klinische Entwicklungspsychologie» am Psychologischen Institut und am interdisziplinären «Jacobs Center for Productive Youth Development». Sie ist auch Mitglied der «International Max Planck Research School on the Life Course» (LIFE), der «z-Proso International Research Network» und des «Center for Developmental Epidemiology» am «Duke University Medical Center». Professor Shanahan ist auch Adjunct Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience an der University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill.
Beruflicher Werdegang
Prof. Dr. Shanahan erhielt ihren MSc und PhD in «Human Development and Family Studies» an der Pennsylvania State University. Nach der Promotion erhielt sie ein NICHD-Stipendium («National Institute for Child Health and Human Development») für eine Post-doctoral Fellowship am «Center for Developmental Science» an der University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill und am «Center for Developmental Epidemiology» an der Duke University.
Von 2008 bis 2011 war sie Assistenzprofessorin für Entwicklungspsychologie an der University of North Carolina in Greensboro. Von 2012 bis 2016 war sie Assistenzprofessorin für Entwicklungspsychologie am «Department for Psychology and Neuroscience» an der University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill.
Forschungsschwerpunkte
- soziale und biologische Risikofaktoren für Depressionen und Angststörungen
- längerfristige Entwicklungsfolgen von psychischen und körperlichen Problemen im Kindes- und Jugendalter bis ins Erwachsenenalter
- Überschneidung der psychischen und körperlichen Gesundheit im Kindes- und Jugendalter
- Geschlechterunterschiede in der Entwicklungspsychopathologie
Publikationen
ZORA Publication List
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Publications
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The worst and the best: new insights into risk and resilience in young adults from the COVID-19 pandemic. Adversity and resilience science, 4(3):291-305.
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Positive Prospective Mental Imagery Characteristics in Young Adults and Their Associations with Depressive Symptoms. Cognitive Therapy and Research, 47(4):695-706.
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An integrative approach for the analysis of risk and health across the life course: challenges, innovations, and opportunities for life course research. Discover Social Science and Health, 3(1):14.
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When Substance Use Is Underreported: Comparing Self-Reports and Hair Toxicology in an Urban Cohort of Young Adults. Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 62(7):791-804.
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Self-, other-, and dual-harm during adolescence: a prospective-longitudinal study of childhood risk factors and early adult correlates. Psychological Medicine, 53(9):3995-4003.
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Adult criminal outcomes of juvenile justice involvement. Psychological Medicine, 53(8):3711-3718.
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Parental supervision positively impacts children’s economic prospects two decades later: A prospective longitudinal study. PLoS ONE, 18 (5)(e0286218):1-12.
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Longitudinal associations between specific types of emotional reactivity and psychological, physical health, and school adjustment. Development and Psychopathology, 35(2):509-523.
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Defining despair: Assessing the multidimensionality of despair and its association with suicidality and substance use in early to middle adulthood. Social Science & Medicine, 320:115764.
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Physiologic and Behavioral Correlates of Energy Intake in Emerging Adulthood: Cross-Sectional Analysis of the RIGHT Track Health Study. Journal of Nutrition, 153(1):88-95.
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Developmental Trajectories of Self-, Other-, and Dual-Harm across Adolescence: The Role of Relationships with Peers and Teachers. Psychopathology, 56(1-2):138-147.
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Childhood loneliness as a specific risk factor for adult psychiatric disorders. Psychological Medicine, 53(1):227-235.
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Suicidal ideation and self-injury in LGB youth: a longitudinal study from urban Switzerland. Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Mental Health, 16:21.
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Early adversities accelerate epigenetic aging into adulthood: a 10‐year, within‐subject analysis. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 63(11):1308-1315.
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Associations of different hormonal contraceptive methods with hair concentrations of cortisol, cortisone, and testosterone in young women. Comprehensive Psychoneuroendocrinology, 12:100161.
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Parental perception of mental health needs in young children. Child and Adolescent Mental Health, 27(4):328-334.
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Long-term Outcomes of Childhood Family Income Supplements on Adult Functioning. JAMA Pediatrics, 176(10):1020-1026.
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Maternal Depressive Symptoms and Adolescents’ Unhealthy Behavior: A 15-year Longitudinal Study. Pediatrics, 150(4):e2022056562.
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Do “Real World” Childhood Mental Health Services Reduce Risk for Adult Psychiatric Disorders?. Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 61(8):1041-1049.e7.
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Prevalence and Correlates of Physical-mental Multimorbidity in Outpatient Children From a Pediatric Hospital in Canada. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry. Revue Canadienne de Psychiatrie, 67(8):626-637.