LabCompass

Elesia Hines

Neuroscience · Indiana University

Publications

11

Citations

86

Est. group size

Recurring co-author estimate

Active years

10

Publishing since 2016

Research summary
AI-generated

Elesia Hines works at the intersection of neuroscience, child development, and family support. Their published work addresses topics such as the early identification of autism spectrum disorder, reflective practices in home visiting programs, and supporting children affected by parental incarceration. The research emphasizes clinical assessment, diagnosis, and family-centered care for young children.

Autism spectrum disorder identificationChild and infant mental healthFamily and disability supportHome visiting and reflective practiceAssessment and treatment considerations

Publication activity has been low but steady over the past decade, averaging under one publication per year in recent years.

Generated by claude-opus-4-8 from public bibliographic data · Jul 11, 2026

Publication cadence
Publications per year over the last 10 years — averaging 0.8/year recently
17182019: 2 publications2192020: 1 publication202021: 2 publications2212022: 1 publication22232024: 2 publications2242025: 1 publication2526
Recent publications
  • Parent-Child Separation Due to Incarceration: Assessment, Diagnosis, and Treatment Considerations.

    IUScholarWorks (Indiana University) · 2020

  • Early Identification of Autism Spectrum Disorder: Navigating Uncertainty on the Journey toward an Answer.

    Zero to three · 2019

  • REFLECTION IN HOME VISITING: THE WHAT, WHY, AND A BEGINNING STEP TOWARD HOW

    Infant Mental Health Journal · 2016

  • Reflection in Home Visiting: The What, Why, and a Beginning Step Toward How

    Author eBooks · 2016

Publishes in
  • Autism and child psychopathology series×3
  • Infant Mental Health Journal×1
  • Journal of Developmental & Behavioral Pediatrics×1
  • Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders×1
  • Pediatric Quality and Safety×1

This profile was generated automatically from public scholarly data (OpenAlex). Group size and activity levels are estimates derived from co-authorship patterns.

Last updated Jul 11, 2026.

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