4 results match your criteria: "and Queens College of The City University of New York[Affiliation]"
Background: Children with Down syndrome often engage in contextually inappropriate social behavior, which researchers suggest may function to escape from difficult activities to preferred social interactions. Caregivers may reinforce the behavior, perceiving it only as evidence of the child's social strength, when, in fact, the pattern may also prevent or slow the development of critical skills. Unlike overt forms of challenging behavior, contextually inappropriate social behavior had never been subjected to experimental analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Processes
July 2011
Institute for Children with Autism and Related Disorders and Queens College of the City University of New York, Psychology Department, Flushing, NY 11367, USA.
Effects of prior discrimination training on stimulus control by color and shape dimensions of compound stimuli were studied with college students. In Phase 1, single-stimulus discrimination training was conducted for two values of color and shape. Phase 2 discrimination training employed two 2-dimensional compound stimuli composed of the color and shape stimuli trained in Phase 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Atten Disord
September 2009
Neuropsychology Subprogram, The Graduate Center and Queens College of the City University of New York, NY, USA.
Objective: To examine cognitive and psychosocial factors associated with high school dropout in urban adolescents with and without childhood ADHD.
Method: In a longitudinal study, 49 adolescents/young adults with childhood ADHD and 44 controls who either dropped out or graduated from high school are included. Risk factors examined as potential correlates of dropout were intelligence, reading skills, socioeconomic status, marijuana use, and paternal contact.
J Med Chem
April 2000
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Graduate School and University Center, and Queens College of The City University of New York, Flushing, New York 11367, USA.
Analogues of a bipartite compound, dequalinium (DECA) (quinolinium, 1,1'-(1,10-decanediyl)bis(4-amino-2-methyl diiodide)), were tested for inhibition of protein kinase C(alpha) (PKC(alpha)). In vitro assays of monomeric and dimeric analogues support a model in which DECA inhibits PKC(alpha) by an obligatory two-point contact, a unique mechanism among PKC inhibitors. The presence of unsaturation in the center of the C(10)-alkyl linker produced geometric isomers with different inhibitory potencies: cis IC(50) = 52 +/- 12 microM and trans IC(50) = 12 +/- 3 microM, where the trans isomer was equipotent to that of the saturated C(10)-DECA.
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