“…In support of this theoretical work, studies of participants ranging from preschool to adulthood have demonstrated that greater informant discrepancies relate to increased variation in the contexts within which participants express the behaviors being assessed (De Los Reyes, Bunnell, & Beidel, 2013; De Los Reyes, Henry, Tolan, & Wakschlag, 2009; Hartley, Zakriski, & Wright, 2011). Further, experimental work indicates that trained judges of children’s behavior (i.e., clinicians) attend to contextual information (e.g., environmental risk factors of childhood psychopathology) when providing reports about such behavior (De Los Reyes & Marsh, 2011). Additional experimental work indicates that parents and adolescents can be trained to incorporate information about the contexts within which specific behaviors occur when providing reports about these behaviors (De Los Reyes, Ehrlich et al, 2013).…”