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Masyn, Katherine E.; Henderson, Craig E.; Greenbaum, Paul E. – Social Development, 2010
This paper provides an introduction to a recently developed conceptual framework--the dimensional-categorical spectrum--for utilizing general factor mixture models to explore the latent structures of psychological constructs. This framework offers advantages over traditional latent variable models that usually employ either continuous latent…
Descriptors: Check Lists, Child Behavior, Psychology, Social Development
Sharp, Carla; Fonagy, Peter – Social Development, 2008
Recent studies of the relationship between parenting and child development have included a focus on the parent's capacity to treat the child as a psychological agent. Several constructs have been developed to refer to this capacity, for example maternal mind-mindedness, reflective functioning, and parental mentalizing. In this review article, we…
Descriptors: Models, Psychopathology, Child Development, Parent Child Relationship
Gottlieb, Gilbert; Lickliter, Robert – Social Development, 2004
In this article, the authors take a very conservative view of the contribution of animal models to an understanding of human development. We do not think that homologies can be readily documented with even our most closely related relatives' behavior and psychological functioning. The major contribution of animal models is their provision of food…
Descriptors: Animals, Etiology, Models, Development

Halberstadt, Amy G.; Denham, Susanne A.; Dunsmore, Julie C. – Social Development, 2001
Describes a theoretical model for affective social competence to include the three integrated and dynamic components of sending affective messages, receiving affective messages, and experiencing affect. Places the model within the context of previous research and theory related to affective social competence and, for each component, examines how…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Child Behavior, Children, Emotional Development