CYBERMED LIFE - ORGANIC  & NATURAL LIVING

PARENTING

  • 2.5‐Year‐Olds Express Suspense When Others Approach Reality With False Expectations ?

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    Abstract Title:
    2.5‐Year‐Olds Express Suspense When Others Approach Reality With False Expectations
     
    Abstract Author(s):
    Moll H1, Khalulyan A1, Moffett L1.
     
    Abstract:

    The study investigated if 2.5-year-olds are susceptible to suspense and express tension when others' false expectations are about to be disappointed. In two experiments (N = 32 each), children showed more tension when a protagonist approached a box with a false belief about its content than when she was ignorant. In Experiment 2, children also expressed more tension when the protagonist's belief was false than when it was true. The findings reveal that toddlers affectively anticipate the "rude awakening" of an agent who is about to discover unexpected reality. They thus not only understand false beliefs per se but also grasp the affective implications of being mistaken. The results are discussed with recourse to current theories about early understanding of false beliefs.

     
  • A Dual Identity Approach for Conceptualizing and Measuring Children's Gender Identity ?

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    Abstract Title:
    A Dual Identity Approach for Conceptualizing and Measuring Children's Gender Identity
     
    Abstract Author(s):
    Martin CL1, Andrews NC1, England DE1, Zosuls K1, Ruble DN2.
     
    Abstract:

    The goal was to test a new dual identity perspective on gender identity by asking children (n = 467) in three grades (Mage  = 5.7, 7.6, 9.5) to consider the relation of the self to both boys and girls. This change shifted the conceptualization of gender identity from one to two dimensions, provided insights into the meaning and measurement of gender identity, and allowed for revisiting ideas about the roles of gender identity in adjustment. Using a graphical measure to allow assessment of identity in young children and cluster analyses to determine types of identity, it was found that individual and developmental differences in how similar children feel to both genders, and these variations matter for many important personal and social outcomes.

     
  • Cognitive Development Trajectories of Very Preterm and Typically Developing Children ?

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    Abstract Title:
    Cognitive Development Trajectories of Very Preterm and Typically Developing Children
     
    Abstract Author(s):
    Mangin KS1,2, Horwood LJ3, Woodward LJ2.
     
    Abstract:
    Cognitive impairment is common among children born very preterm (VPT), yet little is known about how this risk changes over time. To examine this issue, a regional cohort of 110 VPT (≤ 32 weeks gestation) and 113 full-term (FT) born children was prospectively assessed at ages 4, 6, 9, and 12 years using the Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence-Revised and then Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children, 4th ed. At all ages, VPT children obtained lower scores than their FT born peers (p < .001). Growth curve modeling revealed stable cognitive trajectories across both groups. Neonatal white matter abnormalities and family socioeconomic adversity additively predicted cognitive risk. Despite some intraindividual variability, cognitive functioning of typically developing and high-risk VPT children was stable and influenced by early neurological development and family rearing context.
     
  • Developmental Relations Among Behavioral Inhibition, Anxiety, and Attention Biases to Threat and Positive Information ?

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    Abstract Title:
    Developmental Relations Among Behavioral Inhibition, Anxiety, and Attention Biases to Threat and Positive Information
     
    Abstract Author(s):
    White LK1, Degnan KA2, Henderson HA3, Pérez-Edgar K4, Walker OL5, Shechner T6, Leibenluft E7, Bar-Haim Y8, Pine DS7, Fox NA5.
     
    Abstract:

    This study examined relations between behavioral inhibition (BI) assessed in toddlerhood (n = 268) and attention biases (AB) to threat and positive faces and maternal-reported anxiety assessed when children were 5- and 7-year-old. Results revealed that BI predicted anxiety at age 7 in children with AB toward threat, away from positive, or with no bias, at age 7; BI did not predict anxiety for children displaying AB away from threat or toward positive. Five-year AB did not moderate the link between BI and 7-year anxiety. No direct association between AB and BI or anxiety was detected; moreover, children did not show stable AB across development. These findings extend our understanding of the developmental links among BI, AB, and anxiety.

     
  • Early Childhood Predictors of Severe Youth Violence in Low‐Income Male Adolescents ?

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    Abstract Title:
    Early Childhood Predictors of Severe Youth Violence in Low‐Income Male Adolescents
     
    Abstract Author(s):
    Sitnick SL1,2, Shaw DS2, Weaver CM2, Shelleby EC2,3, Choe DE4, Reuben JD2, Gilliam M2, Winslow EB5, Taraban L2.
     
    Abstract:

    Using a cohort of 310 low-income male adolescents living in an urban community and followed prospectively from 18 months through adolescence (ages 15-18 years), the current study examined whether individual, family, and community risk factors from ages 18 to 42 months were associated with adolescents' violent behavior, as indexed by juvenile petitions. Results of multivariate analyses indicated that although family income was the only factor to discriminate those with no arrest record from those with nonviolent arrests, rejecting parenting, child oppositional behavior, emotion regulation, and minority status during the toddler period contributed unique variance in distinguishing male adolescents arrested for violent behavior compared to those never arrested and those arrested for nonviolent behavior. Implications for prevention efforts are discussed.

     
  • Early Maternal Employment and Children's Academic and Behavioral Skills in Australia and the United Kingdom ?

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    Abstract Title:
    Early Maternal Employment and Children's Academic and Behavioral Skills in Australia and the United Kingdom
     
    Abstract Author(s):
    Lombardi CM1, Coley RL1.
     
    Abstract:
    This study assessed the links between early maternal employment and children's later academic and behavioral skills in Australia and the United Kingdom. Using representative samples of children born in each country from 2000 to 2004 (Australia N = 5,093, U.K. N = 18,497), OLS regression models weighted with propensity scores assessed links between maternal employment in the 2 years after childbearing and children's skills in first grade. There were neutral associations between maternal employment and children's first-grade skills in both countries. However, there was a slight indication that more time away from parenting was negatively linked to children's behavioral functioning in Australia and employment begun between 9 and 24 months was positively linked to cognitive skills for U.K. children of low-wage mothers.
     
  • Explaining Constrains Causal Learning in Childhood ?

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    Abstract Title:
    Explaining Constrains Causal Learning in Childhood
     
    Abstract Author(s):
    Walker CM1, Lombrozo T2, Williams JJ3, Rafferty AN4, Gopnik A2.
     
    Abstract:
    Three experiments investigate how self-generated explanation influences children's causal learning. Five-year-olds (N = 114) observed data consistent with two hypotheses and were prompted to explain or to report each observation. In Study 1, when making novel generalizations, explainers were more likely to favor the hypothesis that accounted for more observations. In Study 2, explainers favored a hypothesis that was consistent with prior knowledge. Study 3 pitted a hypothesis that accounted for more observations against a hypothesis consistent with prior knowledge. Explainers were more likely to base generalizations on prior knowledge. Findings suggest that attempts to explain drive children to evaluate hypotheses using features of "good" explanations, or those supporting generalizations with broad scope, as informed by children's prior knowledge and observations.
     
  • Exploring the Causal Effect of Interpretation Bias on Attachment Expectations ?

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    Abstract Title:
    Exploring the Causal Effect of Interpretation Bias on Attachment Expectations
     
    Abstract Author(s):
    De Winter S1, Bosmans G1, Salemink E2.
     
    Abstract:

    Attachment theory implies that children's inclination to interpret attachment figures behavior as supportive and available causally influences children's trust in their attachment figure's availability. An experiment was conducted to test whether training children (8-12 years old) to interpret ambiguous interactions with their mothers in a more secure way increases their trust in their mother's availability. Participants (N = 49) were randomly assigned to either a secure condition to train children to interpret their mother's behavior as supportive or a neutral placebo condition, where interpretations were unrelated to maternal support. Results supported the hypothesis: After the secure training, children interpreted maternal behavior more securely and trusted more in her availability. This suggests that attachment-related processing biases causally affect attachment expectations.

     
  • Face Detection and the Development of Own‐Species Bias in Infant Macaques ?

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    Abstract Title:
    Face Detection and the Development of Own‐Species Bias in Infant Macaques
     
    Abstract Author(s):
    Simpson EA1, Jakobsen KV2, Damon F3, Suomi SJ4, Ferrari PF5, Paukner A4.
     
    Abstract:

    In visually complex environments, numerous items compete for attention. Infants may exhibit attentional efficiency-privileged detection, attention capture, and holding-for face-like stimuli. However, it remains unknown when these biases develop and what role, if any, experience plays in this emerging skill. Here, nursery-reared infant macaques' (Macaca mulatta; n = 10) attention to faces in 10-item arrays of nonfaces was measured using eye tracking. With limited face experience, 3-week-old monkeys were more likely to detect faces and looked longer at faces compared to nonfaces, suggesting a robust face detection system. By 3 months, after peer exposure, infants looked faster to conspecific faces but not heterospecific faces, suggesting an own-species bias in face attention capture, consistent with perceptual attunement.

     
  • Gender Differences in Child Aggression: Relations With Gender‐Differentiated Parenting and Parents’ Gender‐Role Stereotypes ?

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    Abstract Title:
    Gender Differences in Child Aggression: Relations With Gender‐Differentiated Parenting and Parents’ Gender‐Role Stereotypes
     
    Abstract Author(s):
    Endendijk JJ1, Groeneveld MG1, van der Pol LD1, van Berkel SR1, Hallers-Haalboom ET1, Bakermans-Kranenburg MJ1, Mesman J1.
     
    Abstract:
    This longitudinal study examines the association between child gender and child aggression via parents' physical control, moderated by parents' gender-role stereotypes in a sample of 299 two-parent families with a 3-year-old child in the Netherlands. Fathers with strong stereotypical gender-role attitudes and mothers were observed to use more physical control strategies with boys than with girls, whereas fathers with strong counterstereotypical attitudes toward gender roles used more physical control with girls than with boys. Moreover, when fathers had strong attitudes toward gender roles (stereotypical or counterstereotypical), their differential treatment of boys and girls completely accounted for the gender differences in children's aggressive behavior a year later. Mothers' gender-differentiated parenting practices were unrelated to gender differences in child aggression.
     
  • Identity Processes and Parent–Child and Sibling Relationships in Adolescence: A Five‐Wave Multi‐Informant Longitudinal Study ?

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    Abstract Title:
    Identity Processes and Parent–Child and Sibling Relationships in Adolescence: A Five‐Wave Multi‐Informant Longitudinal Study
     
    Abstract Author(s):
    Crocetti E1, Branje S1, Rubini M2, Koot HM3, Meeus W1,4.
     
    Abstract:
    The purpose of this study was to examine reciprocal associations between identity processes (commitment, in-depth exploration, and reconsideration of commitment) and dimensions (support, negative interaction, and power) of maternal, paternal, and sibling relationships. A total of 497 Dutch families including 14-years-old adolescents (56.9% males), their fathers, mothers, and siblings, for a total of 1,988 respondents, participated in a five-wave longitudinal study. Cross-lagged analyses indicated that commitment and in-depth exploration predicted improvements in family relationships (unidirectional effects), whereas reconsideration of commitment was predicted by low levels of maternal support and worsened the quality of the paternal relationship (reciprocal effects). These results were not moderated by adolescents' gender and sibling characteristics. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.
     
  • Origins of Secure Base Script Knowledge and the Developmental Construction of Attachment Representations ?

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    Abstract Title:
    Origins of Secure Base Script Knowledge and the Developmental Construction of Attachment Representations
     
    Abstract Author(s):
    Waters TE1, Ruiz SK2, Roisman GI2.
     
    Abstract:
    Increasing evidence suggests that attachment representations take at least two forms: a secure base script and an autobiographical narrative of childhood caregiving experiences. This study presents data from the first 26 years of the Minnesota Longitudinal Study of Risk and Adaptation (N = 169), examining the developmental origins of secure base script knowledge in a high-risk sample and testing alternative models of the developmental sequencing of the construction of attachment representations. Results demonstrated that secure base script knowledge was predicted by observations of maternal sensitivity across childhood and adolescence. Furthermore, findings suggest that the construction of a secure base script supports the development of a coherent autobiographical representation of childhood attachment experiences with primary caregivers by early adulthood.
     
  • PARENTING

  • Parents' Perceived Discrimination and Adolescent Adjustment in Chinese American Families: Mediating Family Processes ?

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    Abstract Title:
    Parents' Perceived Discrimination and Adolescent Adjustment in Chinese American Families: Mediating Family Processes
    Abstract Author(s):
    Hou Y1, Kim SY1, Hazen N1, Benner AD1.
     
    Abstract:
    Parental discriminatory experiences can have significant implications for adolescent adjustment. This study examined family processes linking parental perceived discrimination to adolescent depressive symptoms and delinquent behaviors by using the family stress model and incorporating family systems theory. Participants were 444 Chinese American adolescents (Mage.wave1  = 13.03) and their parents residing in Northern California. Testing of actor-partner interdependent models showed a significant indirect effect from earlier paternal (but not maternal) perceived discrimination to later adolescent adjustment through paternal depressive symptoms and maternal hostility toward adolescents. The results highlight the importance of including both parents and examining actor and partner effects to provide a more comprehensive understanding of how maternal and paternal perceived discrimination differentially and indirectly relate to adolescent adjustment.
  • Prevention of Targeted School Violence by Responding to Students' Psychosocial Crises: The NETWASS Program ?

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    Abstract Title:
    Prevention of Targeted School Violence by Responding to Students' Psychosocial Crises: The NETWASS Program
     
    Abstract Author(s):
    Leuschner V1, Fiedler N1, Schultze M1, Ahlig N1, Göbel K1, Sommer F1, Scholl J1, Cornell D2, Scheithauer H1.
     
    Abstract:

    The standardized, indicated school-based prevention program "Networks Against School Shootings" combines a threat assessment approach with a general model of prevention of emergency situations in schools through early intervention in student psychosocial crises and training teachers to recognize warning signs of targeted school violence. An evaluation study in 98 German schools with 3,473 school staff participants (Mage  = 46.2 years) used a quasi-experimental comparison group design with three measurement points (pre, post, and 7 months followup) with schools randomly allocated to implementation conditions. The study found increases in teachers' expertise and evaluation skills, enhanced abilities to identify students experiencing a psychosocial crisis, and positive secondary effects (e.g., teacher-student interaction, feelings of safety).

     
  • Race and Color: Two Sides of One Story? Development of Biases in Categorical Perception ?

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    Abstract Title:
    Race and Color: Two Sides of One Story? Development of Biases in Categorical Perception
     
    Abstract Author(s):
    Timeo S1, Farroni T1, Maass A1.
     
    Abstract:

    Categorical perception is a phenomenon that leads people to group stimuli into categories instead of perceiving their natural continua. This article reviews the literature of two biases connected with categorical perception: categorical color perception and the other-race effect. Although these two phenomena concern distant targets (colors and faces) and imply different biases (one attentional, one mnemonic), they share at least three commonalities. First, they both involve the chunking of continuous dimensions into categories. Second, adult categories are shaped by cultural processes. Third, infants' discrimination performance seems universal and guided by perception. In this article, it is proposed to look for a common developmental mechanism that clarifies the shift from a perceptual to a sociocognitive knowledge of the environment. New perspectives are discussed.

     
  • Realizing Relevance: The Influence of Domain‐Specific Information on Generation of New Knowledge Through Integration in 4‐ to 8‐Year‐Old Children ?

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    Abstract Title:
    Realizing Relevance: The Influence of Domain‐Specific Information on Generation of New Knowledge Through Integration in 4‐ to 8‐Year‐Old Children
     
    Abstract Author(s):
    Patricia J. BauerMarina Larkina
     
    Abstract:
    In accumulating knowledge, direct modes of learning are complemented by productive processes, including self‐generation based on integration of separate episodes. Effects of the number of potentially relevant episodes on integration were examined in 4‐ to 8‐year‐olds (= 121; racially/ethnically heterogeneous sample, English speakers, from large metropolitan area). Information was presented along with unrelated or related episodes; the latter challenged children to identify the relevant subset of episodes for integration. In Experiment 1, 4‐ and 6‐year‐olds integrated in the unrelated context. Six‐year‐olds also succeeded in the related context in forced‐choice testing. In Experiment 2, 8‐year‐olds succeeded in open‐ended and forced‐choice testing. Results illustrate a developmental progression in productive extension of knowledge due in part to age‐related increases in identification of relevant information.
     
  • Reducing Children's Implicit Racial Bias Through Exposure to Positive Out‐Group Exemplars ?

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    Abstract Title:
    Reducing Children's Implicit Racial Bias Through Exposure to Positive Out‐Group Exemplars
     
    Abstract Author(s):
    Gonzalez AM1, Steele JR2, Baron AS1.
     
    Abstract:

    Studies with adults suggest that implicit preferences favoring White versus Black individuals can be reduced through exposure to positive Black exemplars. However, it remains unclear whether developmental differences exist in the capacity for these biases to be changed. This study included 369 children and examined whether their implicit racial bias would be reduced following exposure to positive Black exemplars. Results showed that children's implicit pro-White bias was reduced following exposure to positive Black exemplars, but only for older children (Mage  = ~10 years). Younger children's (Mage  = ~7 years) implicit bias was not affected by this intervention. These results suggest developmental differences in the malleability of implicit racial biases and point to possible age differences in intervention effectiveness.

     
  • Sensory Processing in Rhesus Monkeys: Developmental Continuity, Prenatal Treatment, and Genetic Influences ?

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    Abstract Title:
    Sensory Processing in Rhesus Monkeys: Developmental Continuity, Prenatal Treatment, and Genetic Influences
     
    Abstract Author(s):
    Schneider ML1,2,3, Moore CF3,4, Adkins M1, Barr CS5, Larson JA1,2, Resch LM1,2, Roberts A6.
     
    Abstract:

    Neonatal sensory processing (tactile and vestibular function) was tested in 78 rhesus macaques from two experiments. At ages 4-5 years, striatal dopamine D2 receptor binding was examined using positron emission tomography. At ages 5-7 years, adult sensory processing was assessed. Findings were: (a) prenatal stress exposure yielded less optimal neonatal sensory processing; (b) animals carrying the short rh5-HTTLPR allele had less optimal neonatal sensory scores than monkeys homozygous for the long allele; (c) neonatal sensory processing was significantly related to striatal D2 receptor binding for carriers of the short allele, but not for animals homozygous for the long allele; and (d) there was moderate developmental continuity in sensory processing from the neonatal period to adulthood.

     
  • Severe Violence During Adolescence and Early Adulthood and Its Relation to Anticipated Rewards and Costs ?

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    Abstract Title:
    Severe Violence During Adolescence and Early Adulthood and Its Relation to Anticipated Rewards and Costs
     
    Abstract Author(s):
    Elizabeth P. ShulmanKathryn C. Monahan Laurence Steinberg
     
    Abstract:
    This report compares the effects (concurrent and lagged) of the anticipated rewards and costs of violent crime on engagement in severe violence in a sample of male juvenile offenders (N = 1,170; 42.1% black, 34.0% Hispanic, 19.2% white, and 4.6% other; ages 14–18 at baseline). Anticipated rewards (social approval, thrill) are more predictive of concurrent severe violence than are anticipated costs (social disapproval, risk of punishment). The analysis finds no evidence that perceptions of the rewards and costs of violent crime influence engagement in severe violence 6 months later. The results support the view that adolescence is a time of heightened reward salience but raise doubt about the longitudinal predictive validity of perceptions about crime during this time of life.
     

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