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Showing 1 to 15 of 59 results Save | Export
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de Bordes, Pieter F.; Hasselman, Fred; Cox, Ralf F. A. – Developmental Psychology, 2021
This study investigated the developing ability of children to identify emotional facial expressions in terms of the contexts in which they generally occur. We presented Dutch 6- to 9-year-old primary school children (N = 164, 98 girls) prototypical contexts for different emotion categories and asked them whether different kinds of facial…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Nonverbal Communication, Elementary School Students, Emotional Response
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Klimstra, Theo A.; Denissen, Jaap J. A. – Developmental Psychology, 2017
Identity research largely emerged from clinical observations. Decades of empirical work advanced the field in refining existing approaches and adding new approaches. Furthermore, the existence of linkages of identity with psychopathology is now well established. Unfortunately, both the directionality of effects between identity aspects and…
Descriptors: Identification (Psychology), Psychopathology, Psychological Studies, Models
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Freund, Alexandra M.; Blanchard-Fields, Fredda – Developmental Psychology, 2014
Four studies utilizing different methodological approaches investigated adult age-related differences in altruism (i.e., contributions to the public good) and the self-centered value of increasing personal wealth. In Study 1, data from the World Values Survey (World Values Survey Association, 2009) provided 1st evidence of a negative association…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Research Methodology, Altruism, Values
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Dorn, Lorah D.; Sontag-Padilla, Lisa M.; Pabst, Stephanie; Tissot, Abbigail; Susman, Elizabeth J. – Developmental Psychology, 2013
Age at menarche is critical in research and clinical settings, yet there is a dearth of studies examining its reliability in adolescents. We examined age at menarche during adolescence, specifically, (a) average method reliability across 3 years, (b) test-retest reliability between time points and methods, (c) intraindividual variability of…
Descriptors: Females, Individual Characteristics, Puberty, Research Methodology
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Robinson-Cimpian, Joseph P.; Lubienski, Sarah Theule; Ganley, Colleen M.; Copur-Gencturk, Yasemin – Developmental Psychology, 2014
Our target article (Robinson-Cimpian, Lubienski, Ganley, & Copur-Gencturk, 2014) used nationally representative data to examine the development of gender gaps in math achievement. We found that when boys and girls demonstrate equivalent math test performance and are perceived by their teachers to be equally well behaved and engaged with the…
Descriptors: Mathematics Achievement, Gender Differences, Gender Bias, Research Methodology
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Belsky, Jay; Hancox, Robert J.; Sligo, Judith; Poulton, Richie – Developmental Psychology, 2012
Evidence that the transition to parenthood is occurring at older ages in the Western world, that older parents provide more growth-facilitating care than do younger ones, and that most prospective studies of the intergenerational transmission of parenting have focused on relatively young parents led us to evaluate whether parental age might…
Descriptors: Evidence, Parent Child Relationship, Child Rearing, Age
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Fraley, R. Chris; Roisman, Glenn I.; Haltigan, John D. – Developmental Psychology, 2013
Psychologists have long debated the role of early experience in social and cognitive development. However, traditional approaches to studying this issue are not well positioned to address this debate. The authors present simulations that indicate that the associations between early experiences and later outcomes should approach different…
Descriptors: Young Children, Early Experience, Role, Cognitive Development
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Gonzalez, Celia M.; Zosuls, Kristina M.; Ruble, Diane N. – Developmental Psychology, 2010
Recent research has suggested that young children have relatively well-developed trait concepts. However, this literature overlooks potential age-related differences in children's appreciation of the fundamentally dimensional nature of traits. In Study 1, we presented 4-, 5-, and 7-year-old children and adults with sets of characters and asked…
Descriptors: Cues, Research Methodology, Personality, Inferences
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Jelicic, Helena; Phelps, Erin; Lerner, Richard M. – Developmental Psychology, 2009
Developmental science rests on describing, explaining, and optimizing intraindividual changes and, hence, empirically requires longitudinal research. Problems of missing data arise in most longitudinal studies, thus creating challenges for interpreting the substance and structure of intraindividual change. Using a sample of reports of longitudinal…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Data Collection, Developmental Psychology, Longitudinal Studies
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Rieger, Gerulf; Linsenmeier, Joan A. W.; Gygax, Lorenz; Bailey, J. Michael – Developmental Psychology, 2008
Homosexual adults tend to be more gender nonconforming than heterosexual adults in some of their behaviors, feelings, and interests. Retrospective studies have also shown large differences in childhood gender nonconformity, but these studies have been criticized for possible memory biases. The authors studied an indicator of childhood gender…
Descriptors: Videotape Recordings, Sexual Orientation, Homosexuality, Memory
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Stuart, Elizabeth A.; Green, Kerry M. – Developmental Psychology, 2008
Matching methods such as nearest neighbor propensity score matching are increasingly popular techniques for controlling confounding in nonexperimental studies. However, simple k:1 matching methods, which select k well-matched comparison individuals for each treated individual, are sometimes criticized for being overly restrictive and discarding…
Descriptors: Marijuana, Correlation, Adolescents, Adolescent Development
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Curran, Patrick J.; Hussong, Andrea M.; Cai, Li; Huang, Wenjing; Chassin, Laurie; Sher, Kenneth J.; Zucker, Robert A. – Developmental Psychology, 2008
There are a number of significant challenges researchers encounter when studying development over an extended period of time, including subject attrition, the changing of measurement structures across groups and developmental periods, and the need to invest substantial time and money. Integrative data analysis is an emerging set of methodologies…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Data Analysis, Longitudinal Studies, Researchers
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Bradshaw, G. A.; Capaldo, Theodora; Lindner, Lorin; Grow, Gloria – Developmental Psychology, 2009
Longitudinal studies have shown how early developmental contexts contribute significantly to self-development; their influence extends through adulthood, informs sociality, and affects resilience under severe stress. While the importance of sociality in trauma recovery is recognized, the relationship between developmental and posttrauma contexts…
Descriptors: Socialization, Maintenance, Longitudinal Studies, Cultural Context
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Feldman, Betsy J.; Masyn, Katherine E.; Conger, Rand D. – Developmental Psychology, 2009
Analyzing problem-behavior trajectories can be difficult. The data are generally categorical and often quite skewed, violating distributional assumptions of standard normal-theory statistical models. In this article, the authors present several currently available modeling options, all of which make appropriate distributional assumptions for the…
Descriptors: Structural Equation Models, Behavior Problems, Student Behavior, Adolescents
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Morrongiello, Barbara A.; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1990
Infants of 8-28 weeks were tested to determine the smallest sound shift off midline and along the horizontal axis that the infants could reliably discriminate. Results indicated localization acuity increased with age. Video records revealed numerous auditory orienting behaviors with methodological implications. (RH)
Descriptors: Auditory Discrimination, Auditory Perception, Infants, Research Methodology
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