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Denham, Susanne A. – 1987
To validate a new approach to research on the attachment behavior of children beyond toddler age, this study investigated relations between Q-sort outcomes and preschool children's affective perspective-taking; prosocial responsiveness to emotion; social competence, as rated by their teachers; and their mothers' expression and handling of…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Attachment Behavior, Coping, Emotional Experience
Levy, Terry M.; Joffe, Wendy – 1977
This paper describes a three-phase developmental process which often occurs following the termination of an ongoing and intimate relationship. The phases are separation, individuation and reconnection. Each phase has a unique but interrelated matrix of psychosocial reactions, needs and potential for personal and interpersonal development. The…
Descriptors: Adult Counseling, Attachment Behavior, Counselor Role, Developmental Psychology
Wallick, Mollie Marcus – 1982
Effects of maternal-neonatal extended contact or separation were examined in 76 children (8 to 10 years old), five of whom were receiving special education services, and 28 who had been retained in their grade. Of the five Ss requiring special services, three were classified as slow learners and two as speech impaired, two conditions linked by…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attachment Behavior, Disabilities, Followup Studies
Passman, Richard H.; Longeway, Kathleen P. – 1981
This study was designed to identify some of the individual physical features of the mother that promote adaptive responding of 2-year-old children in a novel environment. Previous studies have suggested that any ambiguous stimulus configuration might be effective if the child can be led to perceive it as his mother. After being separated from…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Age Differences, Attachment Behavior, Identification
Frodi, Ann; Willie, Diana – 1979
This paper discusses a series of three studies investigating the influence of infants' characteristics and signaling behavior on parents. Videotapes of either smiling/cooing/gurgling or crying infants were used to elicit parents' physiological and affective responses. Measured physiological responses included skin conductance, heart rate, and…
Descriptors: Arousal Patterns, Attachment Behavior, Auditory Stimuli, Child Abuse
Hagestad, Gunhild O.; Snow, Robert B. – 1977
Examined was the transition made by parents to the "empty nest" phase of family development. Two basic hypotheses were tested: children's growing independence and departure from the home does not represent loss for most parents, but rather is experienced as a gain; and men and women appear to experience the transition differently and…
Descriptors: Adult Development, Attachment Behavior, Family Life, Family Structure
Greenspan, Stanley I.; Lourie, Reginald S. – 1979
This paper applies a developmental structuralist approach to the classification of adaptive and pathologic personality organizations and behavior in infancy and early childhood, and it discusses implications of this approach for preventive intervention. In general, as development proceeds, the structural capacity of the developing infant and child…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Attachment Behavior, Child Development, Developmental Stages
Kotelchuck, Milton – 1975
This paper describes five experimental studies which explored the influence of fathers' home caregiving and interactional characteristics on their infant's laboratory behavior. Approximately 300 families with children ranging in age from 6 to 24 months were studied. Each infant's reactions were observed as a function of the manipulation of the…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Behavior Patterns, Child Care, Fathers
Tracy, Russel L.; And Others – 1974
This paper presents some findings of a detailed analysis of infants' approach behavior in a familiar, naturalistic setting. A total of 26, white, middle-class infant-mother pairs were observed in the home every three weeks during the first year of the child's life. Instances of infant approach to both mother and observer were coded from the…
Descriptors: Affection, Attachment Behavior, Behavior Patterns, Childhood Needs
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Trevathan, Wenda R. – Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 1988
Analysis of the verbal content of 48 Hispanic and Anglo mothers revealed that questions about a newborn infant's gender were more frequent than comments about family resemblance. The contradiction with previous research may be a result of (1) different time intervals for recording conversations or (2) different sociological backgrounds of mothers.…
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Attachment Behavior, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Differences
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Clarke-Stewart, K. Alison – Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 1988
Reviews Jay Belsky's "The 'Effects' of Infant Day Care Reconsidered," and offers a different conclusion: that the mother's attitudes toward the infant and toward her employment status may mediate day care effects on attachment and aggression. (SKC)
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Child Development, Day Care, High Risk Persons
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Belsky, Jay; Rovine, Michael J. – Child Development, 1988
Combines and examines evidence from two longitudinal studies of infant and family development to determine whether experience of extensive nonmaternal care in the first year is associated with heightened risk of insecure infant-mother attachment and, in the case of sons, infant-father attachment. (Author/RWB)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Attachment Behavior, Behavior Patterns, Day Care
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Coates, Deborah L. – Sex Roles, 1987
Examination of 390 Black American adolescents demonstrates that males and females experience very different structured forms of social support. Females report more frequent contact with network members, who were both male and female, slightly older, and met in private settings. Males report larger groups of intimate friends, who are overwhelmingly…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Attachment Behavior, Black Youth, Family Relationship
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Sigel, Irving E. – New Directions for Child Development, 1986
Proposes the use of a distancing strategy model as an approach to studying the social genesis of representational competence in children. Explains how the model describes teaching strategies that make cognitive demands on children. (HOD)
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Child Development, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Development
Weissmann, Lenore; Kromelow, Susan; Harding, Carol Gibb; Mroz, Cheryl; Lynn, Laura; Noll, Lisa – 1999
This study explored the role of perinatal vulnerability (PV) in mothers and infants in relationship to the development of interaffectivity and attachment, and the relationship between interaffectivity and attachment. Participating were a low-risk sample of 74 middle-class mother/first-born infant dyads who had participated as volunteers in a…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, At Risk Persons, Attachment Behavior, Depression (Psychology)
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