Publications by authors named "Monk R"

Article Synopsis
  • A study surveyed 253 individuals, including autistic adults, parents, and professionals from Australia and New Zealand, to understand opinions on support services for young autistic children.
  • About half of the respondents thought support services were acceptable, while the other half felt it depended on the nature of the service provided.
  • Three main ideas emerged: prioritize children’s experiences, avoid "fixing" the child while respecting their unique perspectives, and recognize that personalized early support can significantly benefit autistic children.
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  • * A study of over 19,000 autistic youth revealed they had higher rates of hospitalization and specialist visits, particularly for mental health medications compared to non-autistic youth.
  • * Autistic youth with intellectual disabilities showed increased physical health service usage but lower mental health service usage, indicating a gap in healthcare meeting the needs of autistic youth that requires further investigation and improvement.
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  • The study explored the impact of risk perception during the COVID-19 pandemic on public cooperation and mental health, highlighting potential emotional distress risks.
  • Researchers analyzed two groups of Chinese participants to identify different risk perception profiles related to pandemic response and emotional well-being.
  • Results indicated that a specific profile—perceived-controllable-high-perceived-risk—led to the most cooperation and the least emotional distress, suggesting that this adaptive risk perception approach can balance effective pandemic control with mental health protection.
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Visual perspective taking (VPT) generates a shared frame of reference for understanding how the world appears to others. Whilst greater cognitive and neurophysiological demands are associated with increasing angular distance between the self and other is well documented, accompanying attentional characteristics are not currently understood. Furthermore, although age and group status have been shown to impact task performance, other important cues, such as the relationship between agents and objects, have not been manipulated.

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Background: Previous studies of community priorities for autism research have been limited by low representation of autistic people and thus a bias toward the views of families and professionals. We aimed to determine the first community-led priorities for autism research in Aotearoa New Zealand (NZ).

Methods: Autistic people were essential partners in the project, from inception and design through to methods and outputs.

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Background: Cannabis is consumed in various social and environmental settings, and such contexts may be important predictors of subjective effects. The aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to examine the relationship between contextual factors and subjective effects of cannabis.

Methods: A PRISMA-guided search of MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, Global Health, and Google Scholar yielded 29 studies.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study focuses on how professional supports impact autistic children's learning and wellbeing, aiming to understand different stakeholders' views on desirable outcomes for these children.
  • - A survey with 181 participants—including autistic adults, parents, and professionals from Australia and New Zealand—identified improving mental wellbeing as the top priority, while reducing sensory behaviours was viewed as less relevant.
  • - Findings suggest a shift towards neurodiversity-affirming practices, indicating that support should prioritize outcomes valued by the autistic community rather than conforming to neurotypical standards.
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  • - Recent research highlights that stigma and the need to camouflage traits contribute to mental health issues for autistic individuals, but most data comes from the UK.
  • - A study involving 306 autistic adults from eight different countries aimed to explore the relationships between autism acceptance, camouflaging behaviors, and mental health across cultures.
  • - Results showed that greater acceptance (both external and personal) linked to lower depression levels, while higher camouflaging correlated with increased depression, anxiety, and stress; notable differences in these factors were observed across different countries.
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Introduction: Autism (formally autism spectrum disorder) encompasses a group of complex neurodevelopmental conditions, characterised by differences in communication and social interactions. Co-occurring chronic gastrointestinal symptoms are common among autistic individuals and can adversely affect their quality of life. This study aims to evaluate the efficacy of oral encapsulated faecal microbiome transfer (FMT) in improving gastrointestinal symptoms and well-being among autistic adolescents and adults.

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Introduction: Children's early experiences with alcohol inform the development of alcohol-related beliefs which are known to predict alcohol consumption during the critical stage of adolescence. Yet, there has been considerably less research into these alcohol-related cognitions in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) and existing measures of these beliefs are highly reflective of Western contexts, which may not be fully appropriate for use in LMICs. The aim is to ascertain the construct validity of the Alcohol Expectancies Questionnaire (AEQ) in a non-Western sample.

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Research examining how crowd emotions impact observers usually requires participants to engage in an atypical mental process whereby (static) arrays of individuals are cognitively integrated to represent a crowd. The present work sought to extend our understanding of how crowd emotions may spread to individuals by assessing self-reported emotions, attention and muscle movement in response to emotions of dynamic, virtually modeled crowd stimuli. Self-reported emotions and attention from thirty-six participants were assessed when foreground and background crowd characters exhibited homogeneous (Study 1) or heterogeneous (Study 2) positive, neutral, or negative emotions.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers are investigating the perspectives of autistic adults, parents, and professionals on support goals for young autistic children, as current knowledge in this area is limited.
  • The study surveyed 87 autistic adults, 159 parents, and 80 professionals in New Zealand and Australia, assessing their views on early support and the appropriateness and priority of various support goals.
  • While all groups prioritized goals focused on improving the child's quality of life and support from adults, autistic adults saw goals related to autism characteristics, play skills, and participation as less appropriate and important compared to parents and professionals.
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Objectives: Problematic substance use is one of the most stigmatized health conditions leading research to examine how the labels and models used to describe it influence public stigma. Two recent studies examine whether beliefs in a disease model of addiction influence public stigma but result in equivocal findings-in line with the mixed-blessings model, Kelly et al. (2021) found that while the label "chronically relapsing brain disease" reduced blame attribution, it decreased prognostic optimism and increased perceived danger and need for continued care; however, Rundle et al.

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Unlabelled: Background Previous investigations suggest that the COVID-19 pandemic effects on alcohol consumption were heterogenous and may vary as a function of structural and psychological factors. Research examining mediating or moderating factors implicated in pandemic-occasioned changes in drinking have also tended to use single-study cross-sectional designs and convenience samples.

Aims: First, to explore structural (changed employment or unemployment) and psychological (subjective mental health and drinking motives) correlates of consumption reported during the COVID-19 pandemic using a UK nationally representative (quota sampled) dataset.

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Background: Theory of mind (ToM) - the ability to understand others' beliefs, mental states, and knowledge - is an important part of successful social interaction. There is a growing (albeit mixed) evidence base suggesting that individuals with substance use disorder or who are intoxicated (relative to sober controls) perform worse on a number of ToM tasks. The aim of this study was to explore the hitherto little explored notion that ToM-related capabilities such as the ability to see the world from another person's perspective (termed Visual Perspective Taking; VPT), may be impacted by alcohol-related stimuli.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examined autism research funding in Aotearoa New Zealand from 2007 to 2021, revealing that 67% of the funding went towards biology research.
  • The autistic and broader autism communities expressed dissatisfaction with the funding distribution, feeling it didn't align with their priorities and needs.
  • The findings emphasize the necessity for greater inclusion of autistic individuals in research and funding decisions to ensure that their concerns are addressed.
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Visual perspective taking (VPT) represents how the world appears from another person's position. The age, group status and emotional displays of the other person have been shown to affect task performance, but tasks often confound social and spatial outcome measures by embedding perspective taking in explicitly social contexts or theory-of-mind reasoning. Furthermore, while previous research has suggested that visual perspective taking may be impacted by avatar characteristics, it is unknown whether this is driven by general group processing or a specific deficit in mentalizing about outgroups, for example, children.

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This study contrasts young people's predrinking in two European cultural contexts: Spain and the UK. Whilst UK predrinking typically occurs amongst small groups of individuals who already know one another, the distinctive Spanish context of the Botellón details a far larger gathering in which participants may be less likely to know each other. As such, predrinking motives which drive consumption and risk-taking may be expected to vary between these cultures.

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Objective: Public health policies aim to reduce alcohol consumption and related harms by controlling the cost and availability of alcohol, yet industry actors seek to position branded beverages appealingly vis-à-vis other products. To inform the development of regulatory strategies, it is important to understand how alcohol branding interacts with seductive pricing strategies to influence purchasing decisions. Toward this aim, the current study examines how the "decoy effect" may operate to modify purchasing decisions for branded alcoholic beverages.

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Over the past two decades, there have been increasing discussions around which terms should be used to talk about autism. Whilst these discussions have largely revolved around the suitability of identity-first language and person-first language, more recently this debate has broadened to encompass other autism-related terminology (e.g.

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Objectives: Acute compartment syndrome is a devastating condition associated with lasting consequences or even death if not treated in a timely fashion. Current preclinical modeling is inadequate. Ideally a model should mimic human disease.

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The past three decades have seen a major shift in our understanding of the strong links between autism and identity. These developments have called for careful consideration of the language used to describe autism. Here, we briefly discuss some of these deliberations and provide guidance to researchers around language use in autism research.

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Recent meta-analytical findings indicate that affect regulation plays an important role in alcohol craving, consumption volume, and substance use. However, in view of mixed findings, the affect and drinking likelihood literature remains in need of clarification and consolidation. This systematic review with meta-analyses interrogated the results from peer-reviewed studies among non-clinical populations that examined the relationship between daily affective states and intraday likelihood of alcohol consumption.

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Background: It is well known that, owing to associative processing, olfactory cues can impact memory, emotion and behaviour. Research also points to a link between the smells of particular substances and craving. Yet, to date, little research has investigated how smell may impact other cognitive processes that are known to drive alcohol consumption.

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Coronavirus disease (COVID-19)-related lockdown provided an opportunity to examine the relationship between affect and alcohol consumption in a historically unique context. To shed light on mixed findings regarding the interplay between affective states and alcohol consumption, the present study examined how affective states and affect fluctuations impact drinking during confinement of people to their homes. It also examined the extent to which the social context moderated the affect-consumption relationship.

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