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Showing 2,746 to 2,760 of 10,074 results
Peer reviewedMaynard, Ashley E. – Child Development, 2002
Examined the development of teaching skills in older siblings responsible for teaching their younger siblings to become competent members of their culture among children from a Zinacantec Maya village in Chiapas, Mexico. Found that by age 4, children took responsibility for initiating teaching situations with their younger siblings, and by 8,…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Structures, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedCole, Pamela M.; Bruschi, Carole J.; Tamang, Babu L. – Child Development, 2002
Two studies examined beliefs about revealing emotion among children from Brahman, Tamang and American cultures. Findings indicated three distinct cultural patterns: Tamang were more likely to appraise difficult situations in terms of shame, while the others endorsed anger. Brahmins were more likely not to communicate negative emotion. Americans…
Descriptors: Caste, Childhood Attitudes, Children, Cross Cultural Studies
Peer reviewedRosenblum, Katherine L.; McDonough, Susan; Muzik, Maria; Miller, Alison; Sameroff, Arnold – Child Development, 2002
This study examined the associations between characteristics of mothers' narratives about their 7-month-olds, maternal depression, and their infants' affect regulation during the Still Face procedure. Findings showed that mothers' representations were linked with individual differences in infants' behavior, the association between mothers'…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Depression (Psychology), Emotional Response, Infant Behavior
Peer reviewedPauen, Sabina – Child Development, 2002
Two studies examined whether infants' category discrimination in an object-examination task was based solely on an ad hoc analysis of perceptual similarities among the experimental stimuli. Findings indicated that 10- to 11-month- olds' responses varied systematically only with the presence of a category change, but not with the degree of…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Development, Discrimination Learning, Infant Behavior
Peer reviewedLewis, Michael; Ramsay, Douglas – Child Development, 2002
This study examined individual differences in 4-year-old children's expression of the self-conscious emotions of embarrassment and shame and their relation to differences in cortisol response to stress. Results indicated the presence of two different types of embarrassment--one that reflected negative evaluation of the self, and the other a…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Emotional Response, Preschool Children, Psychophysiology
Peer reviewedBrooks-Gunn, Jeanne; Han, Wen-Jui; Waldfogel, Jane – Child Development, 2002
Examined data on 900 European American children from the NICHD Study of Early Child Care to explore links between maternal employment during the child's first year and child cognitive outcomes. Found that maternal employment by the child's ninth month related to lower school readiness scores at 36 months, with more pronounced effects for certain…
Descriptors: Child Care, Child Care Effects, Cognitive Development, Employed Parents
Peer reviewedLutz, Donna J.; Keil, Frank C. – Child Development, 2002
Two studies with 3-, 4-, and 5-year-olds examined whether young children can differentiate expertise in the minds of others. Findings indicated that all children could correctly attribute observable knowledge to familiar experts, such as a car mechanic. Preschoolers had difficulty making attribution of knowledge of scientific principles to…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Development, Knowledge Level, Metacognition
Peer reviewedMendez, Julia L.; Fantuzzo, John; Cicchetti, Dante – Child Development, 2002
Investigated relations between children's attributes and peer play competence among African American preschoolers attending Head Start. Identified six distinctive profiles of personal attributes linked to adaptation in social functioning. Children with highly adaptable temperaments, strong ability to approach new situations, and above average…
Descriptors: Black Youth, Individual Differences, Interpersonal Competence, Low Income Groups
Peer reviewedHubbard, Julie A.; Smithmyer, Catherine M.; Ramsden, Sally R.; Parker, Elizabeth H.; Flanagan, Kelly D.; Dearing, Karen F.; Relyea, Nicole; Simons, Robert F. – Child Development, 2002
This study examined relations of reactive versus proactive aggression to second-graders' anger after losing in a board game to a cheating confederate. Found that reactive aggression, but not proactive aggression, was positively related to skin conductance reactivity and observed angry nonverbal behaviors, both at an aggregated level and in terms…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Aggression, Anger, Child Behavior
Peer reviewedCrick, Nicki R.; Grotpeter, Jennifer K.; Bigbee, Maureen A. – Child Development, 2002
This study evaluated the intent attributions and feelings of emotional distress of relationally and physically aggressive children in response to instrumental and relational provocation contexts. Findings indicated that physically aggressive children exhibited hostile attributional biases and reported relatively greater distress for instrumental…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Aggression, Attribution Theory, Children
Peer reviewedFrench, Doran C.; Jansen, Elizabeth A.; Pidada, Sri – Child Development, 2002
This study coded descriptions of disliked peers provided by U.S. and Indonesian 11- and 14-year-olds for references to physical, verbal, and three types of relational aggression. Found that physical aggression was mentioned more frequently by boys, adolescents, and Indonesians, with no significant differences in verbal aggression references. Girls…
Descriptors: Adolescent Behavior, Adolescents, Age Differences, Aggression
Peer reviewedLarson, Reed W.; Moneta, Giovanni; Richards, Maryse H.; Wilson, Suzanne – Child Development, 2002
This longitudinal study examined change in 220 adolescents' daily range of emotional states between early and late adolescence. Findings showed that emotional states became less positive across early adolescence; this downward change in average emotions ceased in grade 10. The greatest relative instability was during early adolescence; stability…
Descriptors: Adolescent Attitudes, Adolescent Development, Adolescents, Affective Behavior
Peer reviewedSagi, Abraham; Koren-Karie, Nina; Gini, Motti; Ziv, Yair; Joels, Tirtsa – Child Development, 2002
The Haifa Study of Early Child Care examined the unique contribution of various child-care-related correlates to infant-mother attachment. Findings indicated that, after controlling for other potential contributing variables (including mother characteristics, mother-child interaction, and mother- father relationship), center care adversely…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Child Care, Child Care Centers, Child Care Effects
Peer reviewedLaible, Deborah J.; Thompson, Ross A. – Child Development, 2002
This 6-month prospective study examined how differences in the frequency and nature of early mother-toddler conflict at 30 months related to individual differences in children's socioemotional development at 36 months. Findings indicated that mothers' use of justification, resolution, and mitigation in conflict at 30 months during laboratory tasks…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Conflict Resolution, Emotional Experience, Longitudinal Studies
Peer reviewedRoisman, Glenn I.; Padron, Elena; Sroufe, L. Alan; Egeland, Byron – Child Development, 2002
This 23-year longitudinal study examined the attachment history of earned-secure young adults who coherently describe negative childhood experiences. Findings indicated that retrospective earned-secures were not more likely than continuous-secures to have been anxiously attached in infancy, and were observed in childhood and adolescence to have…
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Attachment Behavior, Comparative Analysis, Longitudinal Studies


