PMC:4024607 / 10722-11858 JSONTXT

Annnotations TAB JSON ListView MergeView

    0_colil

    {"project":"0_colil","denotations":[{"id":"24959326-20797380-27641","span":{"begin":80,"end":84},"obj":"20797380"},{"id":"24959326-20797380-27642","span":{"begin":768,"end":772},"obj":"20797380"}],"text":"Assessments\nThe Karolinska Interpersonal Violence Scale (KIVS) (Jokinen et al., 2010) contains four subscales with direct questions with concrete examples of exposure to violence and expressed violent behavior in childhood (aged 6–14 years) and during adult life (15 years or older). The ratings are filled in during a structured interview to elicit a comprehensive lifetime trauma and victimization history and history of lifetime expressed violent behavior. Interviews and ratings (0–5 for each subscale, total 20) were performed and assessed by trained psychiatrists. The inter-rater reliability of the KIVS subscales was high (r\u003e0.9). The KIVS scale has been validated against several other rating scales measuring aggression and acts of violence (Jokinen et al., 2010). The KIVS scores were grouped into three levels of exposure to interpersonal violence as a child: score 0 and 1 representing “no exposure or mild level of exposure,” score 2 and 3 representing “medium high level of exposure,” and score 4 and 5 representing “high level of exposure” (see Table 1).\nTable 1 The KIVS scores grouped into three levels of exposure\n\nS"}

    2_test

    {"project":"2_test","denotations":[{"id":"24959326-20797380-29259686","span":{"begin":80,"end":84},"obj":"20797380"},{"id":"24959326-20797380-29259687","span":{"begin":768,"end":772},"obj":"20797380"}],"text":"Assessments\nThe Karolinska Interpersonal Violence Scale (KIVS) (Jokinen et al., 2010) contains four subscales with direct questions with concrete examples of exposure to violence and expressed violent behavior in childhood (aged 6–14 years) and during adult life (15 years or older). The ratings are filled in during a structured interview to elicit a comprehensive lifetime trauma and victimization history and history of lifetime expressed violent behavior. Interviews and ratings (0–5 for each subscale, total 20) were performed and assessed by trained psychiatrists. The inter-rater reliability of the KIVS subscales was high (r\u003e0.9). The KIVS scale has been validated against several other rating scales measuring aggression and acts of violence (Jokinen et al., 2010). The KIVS scores were grouped into three levels of exposure to interpersonal violence as a child: score 0 and 1 representing “no exposure or mild level of exposure,” score 2 and 3 representing “medium high level of exposure,” and score 4 and 5 representing “high level of exposure” (see Table 1).\nTable 1 The KIVS scores grouped into three levels of exposure\n\nS"}

    MyTest

    {"project":"MyTest","denotations":[{"id":"24959326-20797380-29259686","span":{"begin":80,"end":84},"obj":"20797380"},{"id":"24959326-20797380-29259687","span":{"begin":768,"end":772},"obj":"20797380"}],"namespaces":[{"prefix":"_base","uri":"https://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/testbase"},{"prefix":"UniProtKB","uri":"https://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/"},{"prefix":"uniprot","uri":"https://www.uniprot.org/uniprotkb/"}],"text":"Assessments\nThe Karolinska Interpersonal Violence Scale (KIVS) (Jokinen et al., 2010) contains four subscales with direct questions with concrete examples of exposure to violence and expressed violent behavior in childhood (aged 6–14 years) and during adult life (15 years or older). The ratings are filled in during a structured interview to elicit a comprehensive lifetime trauma and victimization history and history of lifetime expressed violent behavior. Interviews and ratings (0–5 for each subscale, total 20) were performed and assessed by trained psychiatrists. The inter-rater reliability of the KIVS subscales was high (r\u003e0.9). The KIVS scale has been validated against several other rating scales measuring aggression and acts of violence (Jokinen et al., 2010). The KIVS scores were grouped into three levels of exposure to interpersonal violence as a child: score 0 and 1 representing “no exposure or mild level of exposure,” score 2 and 3 representing “medium high level of exposure,” and score 4 and 5 representing “high level of exposure” (see Table 1).\nTable 1 The KIVS scores grouped into three levels of exposure\n\nS"}

    NEUROSES

    {"project":"NEUROSES","denotations":[{"id":"T205","span":{"begin":137,"end":145},"obj":"PATO_0000436"},{"id":"T206","span":{"begin":319,"end":329},"obj":"PATO_0001411"},{"id":"T207","span":{"begin":625,"end":629},"obj":"PATO_0000469"},{"id":"T208","span":{"begin":975,"end":979},"obj":"PATO_0000469"}],"text":"Assessments\nThe Karolinska Interpersonal Violence Scale (KIVS) (Jokinen et al., 2010) contains four subscales with direct questions with concrete examples of exposure to violence and expressed violent behavior in childhood (aged 6–14 years) and during adult life (15 years or older). The ratings are filled in during a structured interview to elicit a comprehensive lifetime trauma and victimization history and history of lifetime expressed violent behavior. Interviews and ratings (0–5 for each subscale, total 20) were performed and assessed by trained psychiatrists. The inter-rater reliability of the KIVS subscales was high (r\u003e0.9). The KIVS scale has been validated against several other rating scales measuring aggression and acts of violence (Jokinen et al., 2010). The KIVS scores were grouped into three levels of exposure to interpersonal violence as a child: score 0 and 1 representing “no exposure or mild level of exposure,” score 2 and 3 representing “medium high level of exposure,” and score 4 and 5 representing “high level of exposure” (see Table 1).\nTable 1 The KIVS scores grouped into three levels of exposure\n\nS"}