Jon M Houck

researcher

Jon M Houck is …
instance of (P31):
humanQ5

External links are
P6178Dimensions author ID01003214376.69
P2798Loop ID124968
P496ORCID iD0000-0002-6565-4481
P1153Scopus author ID8943803800

P69educated atUniversity of New MexicoQ1190812
P108employerUniversity of New MexicoQ1190812
The Mind Research NetworkQ7751519
P734family nameHouckQ36890100
HouckQ36890100
HouckQ36890100
P735given nameJonQ13501137
JonQ13501137
P106occupationresearcherQ1650915

Reverse relations

author (P50)
Q94457680A comparison of automated and manual co-registration for magnetoencephalography
Q36152732American Indian methamphetamine and other drug use in the Southwestern United States
Q34555627Brain-based origins of change language: a beginning.
Q37677388Brief Motivational Interviewing and Normative Feedback for Adolescents: Change Language and Alcohol Use Outcomes
Q34344733CACTI: free, open-source software for the sequential coding of behavioral interactions
Q52049006Chronometric evidence for entrained attention.
Q81321922Client language as a mediator of motivational interviewing efficacy: where is the evidence?
Q36101309Do therapist behaviors differ with Hispanic youth? A brief look at within-session therapist behaviors and youth treatment response
Q35138557EFFECT OF JOB SKILLS TRAINING ON EMPLOYMENT AND JOB SEEKING BEHAVIORS IN AN AMERICAN INDIAN SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT SAMPLE
Q93353976Examining the influence of active ingredients of motivational interviewing on client change talk
Q30493064From in-session behaviors to drinking outcomes: a causal chain for motivational interviewing.
Q33829500Frontotemporal anatomical connectivity and working-relational memory performance predict everyday functioning in schizophrenia.
Q36735317Functional MRI Evaluation of Multiple Neural Networks Underlying Auditory Verbal Hallucinations in Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders
Q33805852Functional connectivity and cannabis use in high-risk adolescents
Q35071468Group motivational interviewing for adolescents: change talk and alcohol and marijuana outcomes.
Q30616808How group factors affect adolescent change talk and substance use outcomes: implications for motivational interviewing training.
Q51891844Interval timers and coupled oscillators both mediate the effect of temporally structured cueing.
Q39304384Magnetoencephalographic and functional MRI connectomics in schizophrenia via intra- and inter-network connectivity
Q35162958Neural activation during response inhibition is associated with adolescents' frequency of risky sex and substance use.
Q63407709Phase shift detection in thalamocortical oscillations using magnetoencephalography in humans
Q46856666Qualitative and quantitative feedback following workshop training in evidence-based practices: A dissemination study
Q30409176Sex-related differences in auditory processing in adolescents with fetal alcohol spectrum disorder: A magnetoencephalographic study
Q52649114Short- and Long-Term Effects of Within-Session Client Speech on Drinking Outcomes in the COMBINE Study.
Q36430907Temporal variation in facilitator and client behavior during group motivational interviewing sessions
Q37183824Test-retest reliability of self-report measures in a dually diagnosed sample
Q48832391The C50m response: conditioned magnetocerebral activity recorded from the human brain
Q38732415The Motivational Interviewing Treatment Integrity Code (MITI 4): Rationale, Preliminary Reliability and Validity.
Q36440689The impact of therapists' words on the adolescent brain: In the context of addiction treatment
Q33938617The language of motivational interviewing and feedback: counselor language, client language, and client drinking outcomes
Q42227257The structure of client language and drinking outcomes in project match.
Q36599235Therapist empathy, combined behavioral intervention, and alcohol outcomes in the COMBINE research project.
Q36328326Within-session communication patterns predict alcohol treatment outcomes
Q38670771Working memory capacity and addiction treatment outcomes in adolescents.