Marshall B. Jones
Pennsylvania State University
64 Papers
881 Citations
Marshall B. Jones is an academic researcher from Pennsylvania State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Autism & Home advantage. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 64 publications. Previous affiliations of Marshall B. Jones include Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center & University of California, Los Angeles.
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Papers
Mapping autism risk loci using genetic linkage and chromosomal rearrangements
Peter Szatmari,Andrew D. Paterson,Lonnie Zwaigenbaum,Wendy Roberts,Jessica Brian,Xiao-Qing Liu,John B. Vincent,Jennifer Skaug,Ann P. Thompson,Lili Senman,Lars Feuk,Cheng Qian,Susan E. Bryson,Marshall B. Jones,Christian R. Marshall,Stephen W. Scherer,Veronica J. Vieland,Christopher W. Bartlett,La Vonne Mangin,Rhinda Goedken,Alberto M. Segre,Margaret A. Pericak-Vance,Michael L. Cuccaro,John R. Gilbert,Harry H. Wright,Ruth K. Abramson,Catalina Betancur,Thomas Bourgeron,Christopher Gillberg,Marion Leboyer,Joseph D. Buxbaum,Kenneth L. Davis,Eric Hollander,Jeremy M. Silverman,Joachim Hallmayer,Linda Lotspeich,James S. Sutcliffe,Jonathan L. Haines,Susan E. Folstein,Joseph Piven,Thomas H. Wassink,Val C. Sheffield,Daniel H. Geschwind,Maja Bucan,W. Ted Brown,Rita M. Cantor,John N. Constantino,T. Conrad Gilliam,Martha R. Herbert,Clara Lajonchere,David H. Ledbetter,Christa Lese-Martin,Janet Miller,Stan F. Nelson,Carol A. Samango-Sprouse,Sarah J. Spence,Matthew W. State,Rudolph E. Tanzi,Hilary Coon,Geraldine Dawson,Bernie Devlin,Annette Estes,Pamela Flodman,Lambertus Klei,William M. McMahon,Nancy J. Minshew,Jeff Munson,Elena Korvatska,Elena Korvatska,Patricia M. Rodier,Gerard D. Schellenberg,Gerard D. Schellenberg,Moyra Smith,M. Anne Spence,Christopher J. Stodgell,Ping Guo Tepper,Ellen M. Wijsman,Chang En Yu,Chang En Yu,Bernadette Rogé,Carine Mantoulan,Kerstin Wittemeyer,Annemarie Poustka,Bärbel Felder,Sabine M. Klauck,Claudia Schuster,Fritz Poustka,Sven Bölte,Sabine Feineis-Matthews,Evelyn Herbrecht,Gabi Schmötzer,John Tsiantis,Katerina Papanikolaou,Elena Maestrini,Elena Bacchelli,Francesca Blasi,Simona Carone,Claudio Toma,Herman van Engeland,Maretha de Jonge,Chantal Kemner,Frederike Koop,Marjolijn Langemeijer,Channa Hijimans,Wouter G. Staal,Gillian Baird,Patrick Bolton,Michael Rutter,Emma Weisblatt,Jonathan Green,Catherine Aldred,Julie Anne Wilkinson,Andrew Pickles,Ann Le Couteur,Tom Berney,Helen McConachie,Anthony J. Bailey,Kostas Francis,Gemma Honeyman,Aislinn Hutchinson,Jeremy R. Parr,Simon Wallace,Anthony P. Monaco,Gabrielle Barnby,Kazuhiro Kobayashi,Janine A. Lamb,Inês Sousa,Nuala Sykes,Edwin H. Cook,Stephen J. Guter,Bennett L. Leventhal,Jeff Salt,Catherine Lord,Christina Corsello,Vanessa Hus,Daniel E. Weeks,Fred R. Volkmar,Maïté Tauber,Eric Fombonne,Andy Shih +139 more
TL;DR: Linkage and copy number variation analyses implicate chromosome 11p12–p13 and neurexins, respectively, among other candidate loci, highlighting glutamate-related genes as promising candidates for contributing to ASDs.
The Multiple Sources of Mission Drift
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined Weisbrod's contention that nonprofits should avoid unrelated business activities, primarily because of their potential for mission drift, and concluded that commercial ventures are only one among several paths to mission drift and not the most threatening.
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Genetics of Autism: Overview and New Directions
TL;DR: The current knowledge of the genetic epidemiology of autism and the other pervasive developmental disorders (PDDs) is reviewed and promising new directions are highlighted and further progress in mapping susceptibility genes is possible.
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•Journal Article
The UCLA-University of Utah epidemiologic survey of autism : recurrence risk estimates and genetic counseling
Edward R. Ritvo,Lynn B. Jorde,A Mason-Brothers,Betty Jo Freeman,C. Pingree,Marshall B. Jones,William M. McMahon,P B Petersen,William R. Jenson,A Mo +9 more
TL;DR: The authors recently reported an epidemiologic survey of autism in Utah that revealed that autism is 215 times more frequent among the siblings of autistic patients than in the general population.
237
Familial factors influence level of functioning in pervasive developmental disorder.
Joanna E. MacLean,Peter Szatmari,Marshall B. Jones,Susan E. Bryson,William J. Mahoney,Giampiero Bartolucci,Lawrence Tuff +6 more
TL;DR: Data provide some evidence that higher- and lower-functioning PDD children may arise from separate genetic mechanisms, and current gene-mapping studies of PDD may need to take this evidence of genetic heterogeneity into account.
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