Denver has a 'child integrated track'. However, you have to ask for it after you match into their program. You find out if you got the track before you start your intern year though. I just matched there, and talking to the program coordinator, she said that most of the time those who choose that track get it. I have no idea what 'most of the time' is. Could be like being 'ranked to match' for all I know. In their defense, i didn't press her ofr exact numbers and odds ratios lol.
The also offer a child interest track which gives you the peds experience and early exposure to child psych, but doesn't have protected research time or guaranteed acceptance into the child fellowship.
It does have a research component, but based on who I've interacted with so far, there's a lot of clinical research going on as well.
I interviewed at Yale, and although I thought the program was great, and really liked all the researchers and residents I interacted with, I too came away with the feeling that it was way too basic sciencey for me.
Denver is pretty high up there in NIH funding and has a strong component of clinical research. Both the assistant program director for research and the child program director seem very interested in people with a clinical bent.
That said, they also have a lot of the basic sciencey stuff like MEG (much more spatially specific than EEG), 3t MRI and the rest of it.
The downside of the integrated child research track is that it doesn't have a separate match number like MGH, UMASS, and Yale do. It does have protected research time from intern year onward which is awesome and a huge deal, because even at many places where research is emphasized, protected time (no clincial responsibilities) during 1st and 2nd year is impossible to get, and you can sometimes have to fight pretty hard for it in the third year as well. And the UCH Children's Hospital is a pretty big deal as well, which is helpful. One possible upside for some is that the 6th year--a fully funded full-time research year--is optional.
Anyway, good luck with figuring it out. I'd encourage you to apply to all of those programs though, as you might be pleasantly surprised.