J
Janie Busby Grant
Researcher at University of Canberra
Publications - 26
Citations - 702
Janie Busby Grant is an academic researcher from University of Canberra. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Anxiety. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 19 publications receiving 592 citations. Previous affiliations of Janie Busby Grant include Australian National University.
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Digital Dialogue? Australian politicians' use of the social network tool Twitter
TL;DR: In this paper, the first quantitative analysis of the utilisation of the social network tool Twitter by Australian politicians is presented, which suggests that politicians are attempting to use Twitter for political engagement, though some are more successful in this than others.
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A systematic review of psychosocial suicide prevention interventions for youth
Alison L. Calear,Helen Christensen,Alexander Freeman,Katherine Fenton,Janie Busby Grant,Bregje A. J. van Spijker,Tara Donker,Tara Donker +7 more
TL;DR: Preliminary support for the implementation of universal and targeted interventions in all settings, using a diverse range of psychosocial approaches is provided, including universal school-based interventions, which are promising given the potential reach of such an approach.
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Production of temporal terms by 3-, 4-, and 5-year-old children
TL;DR: This article investigated changes in the production of temporal terms over the preschool years, and found that use and command emerge at different ages for different terms for different timeframes and words representing the present and very general temporal terms.
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Preschoolers begin to differentiate the times of events from throughout the lifespan
TL;DR: The ability to localize events at distinct points in time appears to undergo major transition during the preschool years.
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A population study comparing screening performance of prototypes for depression and anxiety with standard scales
Helen Christensen,Philip J. Batterham,Janie Busby Grant,Kathleen M Griffiths,Andrew Mackinnon +4 more
TL;DR: The findings suggest that people may be able to self-identify generalised anxiety more accurately than depression based on a description of a prototypical case, however, levels of identification were lower than expected.