A Pilot Study of Neurocognitive Function and Brain Structures in Adolescents With Alcohol Use Disorders: Does Maltreatment History Matter?
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De Bellis, Michael D, Rajendra A Morey, Kate B Nooner, Donald P Woolley, Courtney C Haswell and Stephen R Hooper (n.d.). A Pilot Study of Neurocognitive Function and Brain Structures in Adolescents With Alcohol Use Disorders: Does Maltreatment History Matter?. Child Maltreatment. pp. 107755951881052–107755951881052. 10.1177/1077559518810525 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/18303.
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Scholars@Duke

Rajendra A. Morey
Research in my lab is focused on brain changes associated with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), traumatic brain injury (TBI), and other neuropsychiatric disorders. We apply several advanced methods for understanding brain function including functional MRI, structural MRI, diffusion tensor imaging, and genetic effects.

Kate B Nooner
Dr. Kate Brody Nooner, PhD, ABPP, has NIH-funded research and collaborates with Dr. David Goldston at Duke Psychiatry as part of the National Consortium on Alcohol & Neurodevelopment in Adolescence. She is also a tenured full Professor, Senior Associate Dean for the College of Science and Engineering, and former Department Chair of the Department of Psychology at the University of North Carolina Wilmington.

Donald Woolley
Ph.D. Sociology, North Carolina State University
M.A. Sociology, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
B.A. Anthropology, Sociology, and History, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
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