“…The YSR/11-18 (Achenbach, 1991b) has been widely used in clinical practice and in psychopathological research due to its usefulness in establishing a quantitative taxonomy. In the last decade, this measurement was used in different populations in order to explore distinct objectives such as investigate which YSR/11-18 items or scales can be used best to predict anxiety disorders in adolescents (Ferdinand, 2007), determine its contribution in the diagnosis of psychiatric comorbidity of juvenile primary headache disorders (Toros et al, 2010), examine emotional and behavioral problems among school adolescents with and without reading difficulties as measured by the YSR/11-18 (Undheim, Wichstrom, & Sund, 2011), test the measurement invariance of the attention and thought problems subscales in a population-based sample of adolescents with and without epilepsy (Ferro, Boyle, Scott, & Dingle, 2014), examine the relationship between weight and psychological distress in Hispanic with excess weight (Yates et al, 2014), detect mental health problems in children's and adolescents in residential care (Sainero, del Valle, & Bravo, 2015), examine the prevalence and characteristics of the dysregulation profile of adolescents based on data from the YSR/11-18 (Jordan, Rescorla, Althoff, & Achenbach, 2016), investigate to what extent emotional and behavioral problems impact on and explain the academic performance of adolescents (Rosso, & Helena, 2017), and identified population-representative youth surveys containing questions on self-reported child maltreatment (Laurin, Wallace, Draca, Aterman, & Tonmyr, 2018).…”