TY - JOUR
T1 - Developmental Markers in Adolescence
T2 - Implications for Studies of Pubertal Processes
AU - Dorn, Lorah D.
AU - Dahl, Ronald E.
AU - Williamson, Douglas E.
AU - Birmaher, Boris
AU - Axelson, David
AU - Perel, James
AU - Stull, Stacy D.
AU - Ryan, Neal D.
N1 - Funding Information:
3Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and Epidemiology at the University of Pittsburgh. Received PhD in Psychiatric Epidemiology from the University of Pittsburgh. Has conducted extensive research studying the familial–genetic and psychosocial/stress risk factors for depression in children and adolescents. Currently involved in projects examining the heritability of anxious traits in macaques as well as research examining the effect of being exposed to specific environments for the subsequent development of depression in children and adolescents. 4Associate Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. Received MD, Medicine and Surgery, at Valle College of Medicine (Cali, Columbia) and completed a Clinical Fellowship in Biological Psychiatry at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, a fellowship in Child Psychiatry at Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center and New York Psychiatric Institute, and a Research Fellowship at Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center and New York Psychiatric Institute. Area of interest includes the psychobiology of mood disorders and anxiety disorders in children and adolescents.
PY - 2003/10
Y1 - 2003/10
N2 - There is inconsistency in the outcome measures of biological and psychosocial studies using measures of puberty as a predictor. For example, some studies show that maturational timing may have differential influences (positive, negative, or no effect) depending on the specific disorder, dimension of measure, and gender. Other studies have suggested that some effects may be more directly linked to pubertal stage or hormone concentrations rather than timing per se. This study outlines several conceptual and methodological issues that may be relevant to addressing these inconsistencies, in the context of examining data from a study of maturational hormones obtained from a unique longitudinal cohort of 24 girls (age 10.0 ± 1.6 years) and 36 boys (age 10.4 ± 1.6 years) in the early part of puberty, where the developmental trajectory of these hormones were tracked annually in 65% of the sample. We explored the contributions of measures of pubertal growth and sociodemographic factors on hormone concentrations. In brief, it appears that no single measure best captures the maturational processes during puberty and suggests that multiple processes are occurring in parallel. Several conceptual and methodological implications are discussed that may guide investigators in interpreting existing studies of pubertal timing and behavior as well as in conducting future studies.
AB - There is inconsistency in the outcome measures of biological and psychosocial studies using measures of puberty as a predictor. For example, some studies show that maturational timing may have differential influences (positive, negative, or no effect) depending on the specific disorder, dimension of measure, and gender. Other studies have suggested that some effects may be more directly linked to pubertal stage or hormone concentrations rather than timing per se. This study outlines several conceptual and methodological issues that may be relevant to addressing these inconsistencies, in the context of examining data from a study of maturational hormones obtained from a unique longitudinal cohort of 24 girls (age 10.0 ± 1.6 years) and 36 boys (age 10.4 ± 1.6 years) in the early part of puberty, where the developmental trajectory of these hormones were tracked annually in 65% of the sample. We explored the contributions of measures of pubertal growth and sociodemographic factors on hormone concentrations. In brief, it appears that no single measure best captures the maturational processes during puberty and suggests that multiple processes are occurring in parallel. Several conceptual and methodological implications are discussed that may guide investigators in interpreting existing studies of pubertal timing and behavior as well as in conducting future studies.
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U2 - 10.1023/A:1024945113763
DO - 10.1023/A:1024945113763
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:0042209607
SN - 0047-2891
VL - 32
SP - 315
EP - 324
JO - Journal of youth and adolescence
JF - Journal of youth and adolescence
IS - 5
ER -