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1.
J Cogn Dev ; 14(1): 35-62, 2013 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23646000

RESUMEN

A series of studies investigated White U.S. three- and four-year-old children's use of gender and race information to reason about their own and others' relationships and attributes. Three-year-old children used gender- but not race-based similarity between themselves and others to decide with whom they wanted to be friends, as well as to determine which children shared their own preferences for various social activities. Four-year-old (but not younger) children attended to gender and racial category membership to guide inferences about others' relationships, but did not use these categories to reason about others' shared activity preferences. Taken together, the findings provide evidence for three suggestions about these children's social category-based reasoning. First, gender is a more potent category than race. Second, social categories are initially recruited for first-person reasoning, but later become broad enough to support third-person inferences. Finally, at least for third-person reasoning, thinking about social categories is more attuned to social relationships than to shared attributes.

2.
Dev Psychopathol ; 22(4): 803-18, 2010 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20883583

RESUMEN

This study examined the developmental cascade of both genetic and environmental influences on toddlers' behavior problems through the longitudinal and multigenerational assessment of psychosocial risk. We used data from the Early Growth and Development Study, a prospective adoption study, to test the intergenerational transmission of risk through the assessment of adoptive mother, adoptive father, and biological parent depressive symptoms on toddler behavior problems. Given that depression is often chronic, we control for across-time continuity and find that in addition to associations between adoptive mother depressive symptoms and toddler externalizing problems, adoptive father depressive symptoms when the child is 9 months of age were associated with toddler problems and associated with maternal depressive symptoms. Findings also indicated that a genetic effect may indirectly influence toddler problems through prenatal pregnancy risk. These findings help to describe how multiple generations are linked through genetic (biological parent), timing (developmental age of the child), and contextual (marital partner) pathways.


Asunto(s)
Adopción/psicología , Desarrollo Infantil , Depresión/psicología , Padres/psicología , Adulto , Trastornos de la Conducta Infantil/etiología , Trastornos de la Conducta Infantil/genética , Trastornos de la Conducta Infantil/psicología , Preescolar , Depresión/etiología , Depresión/genética , Padre/psicología , Femenino , Humanos , Lactante , Estudios Longitudinales , Masculino , Madres/psicología , Relaciones Padres-Hijo , Pruebas de Personalidad , Escalas de Valoración Psiquiátrica , Adulto Joven
3.
Dev Psychopathol ; 21(4): 1293-310, 2009.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19825269

RESUMEN

Emotional instability and poor emotional awareness are cardinal features of the emotional dysregulation associated with borderline personality disorder (BPD). Most models of the development of BPD include child negative emotional reactivity and grossly inadequate caregiving (e.g., abuse, emotional invalidation) as major contributing factors. However, early childhood emotional reactivity and exposure to adverse family situations are associated with a diverse range of long-term outcomes. We examine the known effects of these risk factors on early childhood emotional functioning and their potential links to the emergence of chronic emotional instability and poor emotional awareness. This examination leads us to advocate new research directions. First, we advocate for enriching the developmental assessment of children's emotional functioning to more closely capture clinically relevant aspects. Second, we advocate for conceptualizing children's early family experiences in terms of the proximal emotional environment to which young children may be or become sensitive. Such approaches should contribute to our ability to identify risk for BPD and guide preventive intervention.


Asunto(s)
Concienciación , Trastorno de Personalidad Limítrofe/fisiopatología , Trastorno de Personalidad Limítrofe/psicología , Emociones , Adolescente , Adulto , Síntomas Afectivos/fisiopatología , Síntomas Afectivos/psicología , Trastorno de Personalidad Limítrofe/etiología , Cuidadores/psicología , Niño , Maltrato a los Niños , Discapacidades del Desarrollo/fisiopatología , Discapacidades del Desarrollo/psicología , Familia , Humanos , Individualidad , Aprendizaje , Conducta Social , Temperamento
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