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Development and Psychopathology (DP)

Publisher :

Cambridge University Press

Scopus Profile
Peer reviewed only
Scopus Profile
Open Access
  • Educational Psychology
  • Developmental
  • Psychiatry
  • +1

e-ISSN :

1469-2198

Issue Frequency :

Monthly

Impact Factor :

3.1

p-ISSN :

0954-5794

Est. Year :

1980

Mobile :

4401223553311

Country :

United Kingdom

Language :

English

APC :

YES

Impact Factor Assignee :

Google Scholar

Email :

devpsychopathology@cambridge.org

Journal Descriptions

This multidisciplinary journal is devoted to the publication of original, empirical, theoretical and review papers which address the interrelationship of typical and atypical development in children and adults. It is intended to serve the field of developmental psychopathology which strives to understand patterns of adaptation and maladaptation throughout the lifespan. This journal is of interest to psychologists, psychiatrists, social scientists, neuroscientists, paediatricians, and researchers.


Development and Psychopathology (DP) is :

International, Peer-Reviewed, Open Access, Refereed, Educational Psychology, Developmental, Psychiatry, Mental Health , Online or Print, Monthly Journal

UGC Approved, ISSN Approved: P-ISSN - 0954-5794, E-ISSN - 1469-2198, Established in - 1980, Impact Factor - 3.1

Not Provide Crossref DOI

Not indexed in Scopus, WoS, DOAJ, PubMed, UGC CARE

Publications of DP

  • dott image June, 2005

Biological sensitivity to context: I. An evolutionary–developmental theory of the origins and functions of stress reactivity

Biological reactivity to psychological stressors comprises a complex, integrated, and highly conserved repertoire of central neural and peripheral neuroendocrine responses designed to prepar...

  • dott image February, 2011

Differential susceptibility to the environment: An evolutionary–neurodevelopmental theory

Two extant evolutionary models, biological sensitivity to context theory (BSCT) and differential susceptibility theory (DST), converge on the hypothesis that some individuals are more suscep...

  • dott image March, 2005

Biological sensitivity to context: II. Empirical explorations of an evolutionary–developmental theory

In two studies comprising 249 children and their families, the authors utilized secondary, exploratory data analyses to examine Boyce and Ellis' (this issue) evolutionary–developmental the...

Why and how does early adversity influence development? Toward an integrated model of dimensions of environmental experience

Two extant frameworks – the harshness-unpredictability model and the threat-deprivation model – attempt to explain which dimensions of adversity have distinct influences on development. ...

  • dott image October, 2021

Environmental harshness and unpredictability: Do they affect the same parents and children?

Differential susceptibility theory stipulates that individuals vary in their susceptibility to environmental effects, often implying that the same individuals differ in the same way in their...

  • dott image February, 2022

Hidden talents in harsh environments

Although early-life adversity can undermine healthy development, children growing up in harsh environments may develop intact, or even enhanced, skills for solving problems in high-adversity...

Dimensions of early experience and adaptive and maladaptive development

The special issue titled "Dimensions of Early Experience and Adaptive and Maladaptive Development" likely examines how various early-life experiences shape developmental outcomes, both posit...

  • dott image July, 2019

Biological sensitivity to context: A test of the hypothesized U-shaped relation between early adversity and stress responsivity

We conducted signal detection analyses to test for curvilinear, U-shaped relations between early experiences of adversity and heightened physiological responses to challenge, as proposed by ...

  • dott image February, 2014

Beyond allostatic load: Rethinking the role of stress in regulating human development

How do exposures to stress affect biobehavioral development and, through it, psychiatric and biomedical disorder? In the health sciences, the allostatic load model provides a widely accepted...

  • dott image March, 1999

Emotionality and self-regulation, threatappraisal, and coping in children of divorce

A model of the effects of children's temperament (negative and positive emotionality, impulsivity and attention focusing) on post-divorce threat appraisals, coping (active and avoidant), and...

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