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Bøger i Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development serien

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  • - Secure Base Behavioral and Representational Processes
    af GE Posada
    396,95 kr.

    This monograph examines the interplay between behavioral and cognitive representations of attachmet during early childhood. We track the continued development of secure base support and use while assessing maternal co-construction processes and thier joint impact on children's secure base behavior and attachment representations. First, our investigation establishes that smoothly interacting dyads have mothers who continue to provide secure base support and children who use them as secure base across early childhood (mother sensitivity-child security links). Furthermore, the patterning of children's secure base behavior when interacting with the mother is related to the structure of children's knowledge about secure base relationships. Second, we introduce mother co-construction skills and evaluate their impact on the mother child relationship. Using two different co-construction tasks, we scored maternal co-construction in terms of skills that promote secure base script knowledge. Both tasks were related to maternal AAI coherence and attachment script knowledge. In addition, studies showed that maternal co-construction skills make unique contributions to both child secure base behvior and child script knowledge. Findings support the hypothesis that mothers' cognitive/verbal co-constructive skills during conversations about attachment and emotion-laden situations play a key role in organization of children's attachment behavior and representations. Finally, we demonstrate that maternal script knowledge not only impacts children's script knowledge (intergenerational transmission), but guides mothers' expectations and judgements of mother-child interactions. Throughout this monograph, we stress the importance of an interpersonal approach when investigating attachment relationships during early childhood, where mother-child interactions and communication about attachment-related issues are considered key to unveil co-constructive processes involved in the child's behavioral and cognitive organization of attachment relationships.

  • af Deanna (Teachers College Kuhn
    700,95 kr.

    This work makes the claim that strategies of knowledge acquisition may vary significantly across (as well as within) individuals and can be conceptualized within a developmental framework.

  • af Jeanne Brooks-Gunn, Jane Waldfogel & Wen-Jui Han
    463,95 kr.

    Using data from the first 2 phases of the NICHD Study of Early Child Care, we examine the links between maternal employment in the first 12 months of life and cognitive, social, and emotional outcomes for children at age 3, at age 4.5, and in first grade. Drawing on theory and prior research from developmental psychology as well as economics and sociology, we address 3 main questions. First, what associations exist between 1st year maternal employment and cognitive, social, and emotional outcomes for children in the first seven years of life? Second, to what extent do any such associations vary by the child's gender and temperament or the mother's occupation? Third, to what extent do mother's earnings, the home environment (maternal depressive symptoms, sensitivity, and HOME scores), and the type and quality of child care mediate or offset any associations between 1st-year employment and child outcomes, and what is the net effect of 1st-year maternal employment once these factors are taken into account? We compare families in which mothers worked full time (55%), part time (23%), or did not work (22%) in the first year. Our main results pertain to non-Hispanic White children (N = 900) although we also carry out some analyses for a small sample of African-American children (N = 113). Our findings provide new insight as to the net effects of 1st-year maternal employment as well as the potential pathways through which associations between 1st-year maternal employment and later child outcomes, where present, come about. Our structural equation modeling results indicate that, on average, the associations between 1st-year maternal employment and later cognitive, social, and emotional outcomes are neutral because negative effects, where present, are offset by positive effects. These results confirm that maternal employment in the 1st year of life may confer both advantages and disadvantages and that for the average non-Hispanic White child those effects balance each other.

  • - Evidence from a Multiple-n Diary Study
    af Donna Vea, Letitia R. (University of Pennsylvania) Naigles & Erika (University of Michigan) Hoff
    522,95 kr.

    Flexibility and productivity are hallmarks of human language use. Competent speakers have the capacity to use the words they know to serve a variety of communicative functions, to refer to new and varied exemplars of the categories to which words refer, and in new and varied combinations with other words. When and how children achieve this flexibility--and when they are truly productive language users--are central issues among accounts of language acquisition. The current study tests competing hypotheses of the achievement of flexibility and some kinds of productivity against data on children's first uses of their first-acquired verbs. Eight mothers recorded their children's first 10 uses of 34 early-acquired verbs, if those verbs were produced within the window of the study. The children were between 16 and 20 months when the study began (depending on when the children started to produce verbs), were followed for between 3 and 12 months, and produced between 13 and 31 of the target verbs. These diary records provided the basis for a description of the pragmatic, semantic, and syntactic properties of early verb use. The data revealed that within this early, initial period of verb use, children use their verbs both to command and describe, they use their verbs in reference to a variety of appropriate actions enacted by a variety of actors and with a variety of affected objects, and they use their verbs in a variety of syntactic structures. All 8 children displayed semantic and grammatical flexibility before 24 months of age. These findings are more consistent with a model of the language learning child as an avid generalizer than as a conservative language user. Children's early verb use suggests abilities and inclinations to abstract from experience that may indeed begin in infancy.

  •  
    661,95 kr.

    Exclusion from social groups is a source of conflict, stress and tension in social life around the globe. How do children and adolescents evaluate exclusion based on group membership? This is the report of an investigation of social exclusion in the contexts of friendship, peer groups and school.

  •  
    502,95 kr.

    This monograph has two aims: first, to identify specific processes of the reversal phenomenon by using a developmental approach. Second, to use ambiguous figures as a research tool to shed more light onto children's developing understanding of pictorial representation. .

  • - Findings from Grade 3 to Grade 9
    af Geoffrey Nelson, Robert Arnold, Ray DeV. Peters, mfl.
    502,95 kr.

    Although comprehensive and ecological approaches to early childhood prevention are commonly advocated, there are few examples of long-term follow-up of such programs.

  • af Michael Tomasello, Tara Callaghan, Henrike Moll, mfl.
    457,95 kr.

    The influence of culture on cognitive development is well established for school age and older children. But almost nothing is known about how different parenting and socialization practices in different cultures affect infants' and young children's earliest emerging cognitive and social-cognitive skills.

  • af Shari Miller, Gregory S. Pettit, John E. Bates, mfl.
    463,95 kr.

    This book offers an extensive exploration of the childhood factors that can lead to substance abuse and puts forward a dynamic cascade model of the development of adolescent substance-use onset.

  • - Effects of Institutional Deprivation
    af Jennifer Castle, Edmund J. Sonuga-Barke, Celia Beckett, mfl.
    502,95 kr.

    The English and Romanian Adoptees (ERA) study constituted an invaluable "natural experiment" in which there was a rapid, easily-timed transition from a profoundly depriving environment in Romanian institutions to generally well-functioning adoptive families in England. Multimodal methods of assessment were used throughout the assessments at 4, 6, 11, and 15 years of age. Four key findings were particularly striking. First, institutional deprivation was associated with an apparently deprivation-specific pattern of combinations of quasiautism, disinhibited attachment, cognitive impairment, and inattention/overactivity. Second, longitudinal growth curves showed a relative deceleration of growth between 11 and 15 years (possibly due to early puberty). Third, institutional deprivation without subnutrition was associated with a major impairment in head growth. Fourth, the effects of institutional deprivation were as strong at 15 years as they had been earlier in childhood.

  • af Michelle M. Chouinard
    561,95 kr.

    This Monograph examines the role that children's questions play in their cognitive development.

  • af P Davies
    635,95 kr.

    * tests the theory that high levels of conflict between parents leads to an increased child risk for mental health difficulties; * outlines and explores signs of child insecurity; * includes commentary by Jennifer M. Jenkins. .

  • af Daniel (University of Southwestern Louisiana Povinelli & Timothy (University of Southwestern Louisiana Eddy
    702,95 kr.

    Research suggests chimpanzees may understand some of the epitemological aspects of visual perception, such as how the perceptual act of seeing can have internal several interpretations. These 15 studies were conducted with chimpanzees and young children on their understanding of visual perception.

  • - An Associative Learning Perspective
    af David H. Rakison & Gary Lupyan
    596,95 kr.

    We present a domain-general framework called constrained attentional associative learning to provide a developmental account for how and when infants form concepts for animates and inanimates that encapsulate not only their surface appearance but also their movement characteristics.

  • - Interactions Between Parasympathetic and Sympathetic Nervous System Activity
    af Mona El-Sheikh, Chrystyna D. Kouros, Stephen Erath, mfl.
    478,95 kr.

    Study moderators examined interactions between children's parasympathetic and sympathetic nervous systems (PNS and SNS) activity in order to achieve a greater specificity in the prediction of externalizing problems in the context of interparental conflict.

  • af The St. Petersburg-USA Orphanage Research Team
    440,95 kr.

    Undertaken at orphanages in Russia, this study tests the role of early social and emotion experience in the development of children.

  • - Concurrent and Across-Time Prediction from Youths' Dispositions andParenting
    af Claire Hofer, Tracy L. Spinrad, Elizabeth T. Gershoff, mfl.
    440,95 kr.

    Adolescence is often thought of as a period during which parent-child interactions can be relatively stressed and conflictual. There are individual differences in this regard, however, with only a modest percent of youth experiencing extremely conflictual relationships with their parents.

  • af Robert Plomin, Jennifer Thomson, Yulia Kovas, mfl.
    478,95 kr.

    Despite the importance of learning abilities and disabilities in education and child development, little is known about their genetic and environmental origins in the early school years.

  • af Laurence (Cornell University) Steinberg, Nathan A. (University of Maryland College Park) Fox, Jerome (Yale University) Kagan, mfl.
    525,95 kr.

    Temperament has been a central element of the on-going effort to describe the distinctiveness of persons at every stage of development. Many researchers have examined the relations of temperament to emotions, behavior, and adjustment generally.

  •  
    455,95 kr.

    The role of quantitative methods in testing developmental hypotheses is widely recognized, yet even very experienced quantitative researchers often lack the knowledge required for good decision-making on methodology. The end result is a disconnect between research and practice in methods.

  • - A History of the First 25 years of the Black Caucus of the Society for Research in Child Development, 1973-1997, Volume 71, Number 1
     
    621,95 kr.

    In this monograph, early members of the Caucus describe its history through the first 25 years, 1973-97, in 15 chapters distributed among sections on Caucus history, teaching and mentoring, publications and research-related issues, and supportive academic institutions.

  • - Children's Narrative Accounts and Moral Judgments of Their Own Interpersonal Conflicts
    af C Wainryb
    538,95 kr.

    The research reported in this Monograph documents the narrative accounts and moral evaluations that children between the ages of 5 and 16 made of incidents in which they had been the targets of their peers' unfair or harmful actions and incidents in which they had been those inflicting harm on their peers.

  • - Assessing Relevance Across Time, Culture and Method
     
    582,95 kr.

    * Looks at what parents and other caregivers can do to facilitate healthy development in adolescents. * Reports on research that addresses the limitations of the three most widely accepted dimensions of parenting: support, behavior control, and psychological control.

  • af Michael Tomasello & Malinda (University of Liverpool) Carpenter
    583,95 kr.

    This Monograph reports a series of ten studies on the social-cognitive abilities of three young chimpanzees, ages to four years. * Compares outcomes to similar studies conducted on human infacts for a comparative understanding.

  • - A Study of Native and Non-Native North American Adolescents
     
    613,95 kr.

    This Monograph demonstrates that disruptions to young people's developing conceptions of personal or cultural persistence begin to explain the suicide rates among Aboriginal Canadian and non-Aboriginal Canadian youth.

  • - A Person-Centered Approach
    af Hart
    614,95 kr.

    This work addresses three questions - how can we best describe childhood personality? How is personality related to the child's successes and failures? And what sort of factors are related to personality development?

  • - Predictors, Correlates, and Outcomes
    af William F. Arsenio
    582,95 kr.

    This Monograph addresses three questions: a) Can distinct trajectories of physical aggression be identified in children from 24 months to third grade? b) Do child and family characteristics and child care experiences predict membership in the trajectory groups? c) Do trajectory groups differ in their levels of academic and social functioning in third grade?

  • - Coordinated Timingin Development
    af Joseph (Columbia University) Jaffe, Beatrice (Columbia University) Beebe, Stanley (University of Maryland) Feldstein, mfl.
    658,95 kr.

    This book represents a test to the hypothesis that vocal rhythm coordination at four months of age predicts attachment and cognition at age 12 months. The findings show that high coordination can index more or less optimal outcomes, as a function of outcome measure, partner, and site.

  • - The Role of Maternal Input in the Acquisition of Richly Structured Categories
    af Susan (University of Michigan Gelman
    799,95 kr.

  • af Karen (Carnegie Mellon University Adolph
    549,95 kr.

    This monograph presents a new view of locomotor development - the processes involved in acquiring adaptive mobility. It reports a longitudinal investigation of infants' ability to adapt movements to variations in the terrain and to changes in their physical capabilities.

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