Search
Now showing items 1-10 of 23
Informant discrepancies in assessing child dysfunction relate to dysfunction within mother-child interactions.
(Germany: Springer., 2006)
We examined whether mother-child discrepancies in perceived child behavior
problems relate to dysfunctional interactions between mother and child and stress in the mother. Participants included 239 children (6–16 years ...
Informant Discrepancies in the Assessment of Childhood Psychopathology: A Critical Review, Theoretical Framework, and Recommendations for Further Study.
(American Psychological Association, 2006)
Discrepancies often exist among different informants' (e.g., parents, children, teachers) ratings of child psychopathology. Informant discrepancies have an impact on the assessment, classification, and treatment of childhood ...
Group Intervention to Promote Social Skills in School-age Children with Pervasive Developmental Disorders: Reconsidering Efficacy
(2009-08)
A consistent result in the evaluation of group-delivered intervention to promote social reciprocity in children with PDDs is that outcome data are inconclusive. Lack of robust evidence of efficacy confounds understanding ...
Linking informant discrepancies to observed variations in young children’s disruptive behavior
(2009-07)
Prior work has not tested the basic theoretical notion that informant discrepancies in reports of children’s
behavior exist, in part, because different informants observe children’s behavior in different settings. We ...
Discrepancy between how children perceive their own alcohol risk and how they perceive alcohol risk for other children longitudinally predicts alcohol use
(2010-12)
This paper examined discrepancies between children's self-perceptions of the riskiness of alcohol use versus their perceptions of the riskiness of alcohol use for other children, and whether these discrepancies predicted ...
The Longitudinal Consistency of Mother–Child Reporting Discrepancies of Parental Monitoring and Their Ability to Predict Child Delinquent Behaviors Two Years Later
(2009)
This study examined the longitudinal consistency of mother–child reporting discrepancies of parental monitoring and whether these discrepancies predict children’s delinquent behaviors 2 years later. Participants included ...
Domesticated Dogs’ (Canis familiaris) Response to Dishonest Human Points
(2010)
Pointing is a conventional communicative gesture used by humans to direct others’ attention to an environmental feature. Several researchers have argued that pointing becomes so ingrained for humans from a young age that ...
Linking informant discrepancies to observed variations in young children’s disruptive behavior
(2009)
Prior work has not tested the basic theoretical notion that informant discrepancies in reports of children’s
behavior exist, in part, because different informants observe children’s behavior in different settings. We ...
Group Intervention to Promote Social Skills in School-age Children with Pervasive Developmental Disorders: Reconsidering Efficacy
(2009)
A consistent result in the evaluation of group-delivered intervention to promote social reciprocity in children with PDDs is that outcome data are inconclusive.
Lack of robust evidence of efficacy confounds understanding ...
The influence of context on categorization decisions for mental health disorders
(2009-07)
Mental health clinicians engage in an important form of real world categorization as they diagnose their patients with mental disorder diagnoses. How are clinicians affected by the context within which diagnostic criteria ...