Publication Date
| In 2015 | 78 |
| Since 2014 | 383 |
| Since 2011 (last 5 years) | 1278 |
| Since 2006 (last 10 years) | 2578 |
| Since 1996 (last 20 years) | 4782 |
Descriptor
| Foreign Countries | 1712 |
| Preschool Children | 1692 |
| Age Differences | 1673 |
| Parent Child Relationship | 1590 |
| Infants | 1560 |
| Children | 1503 |
| Child Development | 1394 |
| Young Children | 1270 |
| Mothers | 1262 |
| Cognitive Development | 1197 |
| More ▼ | |
Source
Author
| Saracho, Olivia N. | 48 |
| Eisenberg, Nancy | 37 |
| Gelman, Susan A. | 36 |
| Wellman, Henry M. | 35 |
| Bornstein, Marc H. | 33 |
| Lewis, Michael | 33 |
| Belsky, Jay | 32 |
| Brooks-Gunn, Jeanne | 32 |
| Dodge, Kenneth A. | 32 |
| Flavell, John H. | 30 |
| More ▼ | |
Publication Type
Education Level
| Early Childhood Education | 774 |
| Preschool Education | 434 |
| Elementary Education | 306 |
| Kindergarten | 162 |
| Grade 1 | 75 |
| Elementary Secondary Education | 71 |
| Grade 3 | 52 |
| Grade 5 | 51 |
| Primary Education | 51 |
| Grade 2 | 47 |
| More ▼ | |
Audience
| Researchers | 753 |
| Practitioners | 84 |
| Policymakers | 32 |
| Parents | 17 |
| Teachers | 15 |
| Students | 9 |
| Administrators | 3 |
| Community | 2 |
Showing 2,251 to 2,265 of 10,074 results
Eisenberg, Nancy; Spinrad, Tracy L. – Child Development, 2004
Cole, Martin, and Dennis (this issue) considered many important conceptual and methodological issues in their discussion of emotion regulation. Although it may be necessary to develop an integrated definition of the construct of emotion regulation, the definition provided in the Cole et al. article is too encompassing. It is important to…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Self Control, Emotional Development, Behavior Patterns
Bridges, Lisa J.; Denham, Susanne A.; Ganiban, Jody M. – Child Development, 2004
Operational definitions of emotion regulation are frequently unclear, as are links between emotion regulation measures and underlying theoretical constructs. This is of concern because measurement decisions can have both intentional and unintentional implications for underlying conceptualizations of emotion regulation. This report examines the…
Descriptors: Emotional Development, Emotional Response
Raver, C. Cybele – Child Development, 2004
In their review, Cole, Martin, and Dennis (this issue) relied on a valuable set of empirical examples of emotion regulation in infancy, toddlerhood, and the preschool period to make their case. These examples can be extended to include an emergent body of published research examining normative emotional regulatory processes among low-income and…
Descriptors: Minority Group Children, Emotional Development, Socioeconomic Status, Sociocultural Patterns
Hoeksma, Jan B.; Oosterlaan, Jaap; Schipper, Eline M. – Child Development, 2004
The emotional system is defined as a dynamical system that has neurological and biochemical structures that force the system to change in a regular and consistent way. This dynamic view allows for an alternative definition of emotion regulation, which describes when emotion regulation is needed, identifies its goal, and illustrates how regulation…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Self Control, Parent Child Relationship, Psychological Patterns
Goldsmith, H. H.; Davidson, Richard J. – Child Development, 2004
Affective neuroscience and cognitive science approaches are useful for understanding the components of emotion regulation; several examples from current research are provided. Individual differences in emotion regulation and a focus on the context of emotion experience and expression provide additional tools to study emotion regulation, and its…
Descriptors: Cognitive Psychology, Emotional Response, Self Control, Affective Behavior
Bell, Martha Ann; Wolfe, Christy D. – Child Development, 2004
Regulatory aspects of development can best be understood by research that conceptualizes relations between cognition and emotion. The neural mechanisms associated with regulatory processes may be the same as those associated with higher order cognitive processes. Thus, from a developmental cognitive neuroscience perspective, emotion and cognition…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Emotional Response, Psychological Patterns, Infants
Lewis, Marc D.; Stieben, Jim – Child Development, 2004
Emotion regulation cannot be temporally distinguished from emotion in the brain, but activation patterns in prefrontal cortex appear to mediate cognitive control during emotion episodes. Frontal event-related potentials (ERPs) can tap cognitive control hypothetically mediated by the anterior cingulate cortex, and developmentalists have used these…
Descriptors: Brain, Emotional Development, Self Control, Child Development
Campos, Joseph J.; Frankel, Carl B.; Camras, Linda – Child Development, 2004
This paper presents a unitary approach to emotion and emotion regulation, building on the excellent points in the lead article by Cole, Martin, and Dennis (this issue), as well as the fine commentaries that follow it. It begins by stressing how, in the real world, the processes underlying emotion and emotion regulation appear to be largely one and…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Psychological Patterns, Self Control, Child Development
Saylor, Megan M.; Sabbagh, Mark A. – Child Development, 2004
Two studies investigated how preschool children's interpretations of novel words as names for parts of objects were affected by 3 kinds of information: (a) whole object familiarity, (b) whole part juxtaposition, and (c) syntactic information indicating possession. Study 1 tested 3- to 4-year-olds and found that although there was evidence that all…
Descriptors: Familiarity, Preschool Children, Language Acquisition
Graham, Susan A.; Kilbreath, Cari S.; Welder, Andrea N. – Child Development, 2004
This study examined the influence of shape similarity and labels on 13-month-olds' inductive inferences. In 3 experiments, 123 infants were presented with novel target objects with or without a nonvisible property, followed by test objects that varied in shape similarity. When objects were not labeled, infants generalized the nonvisible property…
Descriptors: Inferences, Infants, Nouns, Logical Thinking
Spinath, Frank M.; Price, Thomas S.; Dale, Philip S.; Plomin, Robert – Child Development, 2004
This study investigated whether genes affect language impairment to the same extent as they affect differences in language ability following up an earlier study of 579 four-year-old twins with low language performance and their cotwins (Viding et al., in press). The present study selected low-language twins from 6,963 pairs of twins from the Twins…
Descriptors: Language Aptitude, Language Impairments, Twins, Genetics
Brody, Gene H.; Kim, Sooyeon; Murry, Velma McBride; Brown, Anita C. – Child Development, 2004
A 4-wave longitudinal design was used to examine protective links from child competence to behavioral problems in first- (M=10.97 years) and second- (M=8.27 years) born rural African American children. At 1-year intervals, teachers assessed child behavioral problems, mothers reported their psychological functioning, and both mothers and children…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, African American Children, Structural Equation Models, Siblings
Striano, Tricia – Child Development, 2004
In the first study, 3-, 6-, and 9- month-olds' behavior was assessed as a stranger broke contact to stare at the infant, to look at a wall, or to look at another person. Regardless of age and the reason contact was broken, the still-face reaction did not depend on the experimenter's intention. In the second study, 3-, 6-, and 9-month-olds…
Descriptors: Intention, Interpersonal Communication, Infants, Infant Behavior
Huth-Bocks, Alissa C.; Levendosky, Alytia A.; Bogat, G. Anne; von Eye, Alexander – Child Development, 2004
This prospective study examined the effects of maternal characteristics, social support, and risk factors on infant-mother attachment in a heterogeneous sample. Two hundred and six women between the ages of 18 and 40 were interviewed during their last trimester of pregnancy and 1 year postpartum. Structural equation modeling revealed that maternal…
Descriptors: Infants, Females, Structural Equation Models, Risk
Brainerd, C. J.; Holliday, R. E.; Reyna, V. F. – Child Development, 2004
Two remembering phenomenologies, vivid recollection and vague familiarity, have been extensively studied in adults using introspective self-report tasks, such as rememberknow. Because such tasks are beyond the capabilities of young children, there is no database on how these phenomenologies first develop and what factors affect them. In…
Descriptors: Familiarity, Recognition (Psychology), Child Behavior, Recall (Psychology)

Peer reviewed
Direct link
