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Cook, William L.; Goldstein, Michael J. – Child Development, 1993
Tested the assumption that familial self-reports are biased by social desirability and other factors, through the use of a latent variables modeling approach that evaluated rater reliability and bias in mother, father, and child ratings of parent-child negativity. Results based on 78 families demonstrated that family member ratings contained a…
Descriptors: Children, Family Relationship, Interrater Reliability, Parent Child Relationship

Korner, Anneliese F.; And Others – Child Development, 1991
The Neurobehavioral Assessment of the Preterm Infant instrument was developed by means of pilot, exploratory, and validation studies. The validation study tested the generalizability of results for different cohorts, test versions, hospitals, and examiners. Seven stable functions were identified: motor development; scarf sign; popliteal angle;…
Descriptors: Behavior Development, Cluster Analysis, Cohort Analysis, Interrater Reliability

Weinrott, Mark R.; Jones, Richard R. – Child Development, 1984
Examines the tendency of observers to make less reliable recordings of behavorial events when a calibrating observer is absent. Using four different multicategory systems, 26 experienced observers coded 200 hours of videotaped family interactions. Concludes that observers lapse into a less attentive "set" prior to coding without a…
Descriptors: Adults, Behavior Patterns, Behavior Rating Scales, Family (Sociological Unit)

Teti, Douglas M.; McGourty, Sharon – Child Development, 1996
Examined associations between mothers' and trained observers' Attachment Q-Set (AQS) sorts for preschoolers and assessed mother-observer concordance in relation to observers' confidence about how representative the behavior they witnessed was of the domain of AQS items. Found that mothers' and observers' sorts were significantly intercorrelated;…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Child Behavior, Correlation, Experimenter Characteristics

Seifer, Ronald; And Others – Child Development, 1994
Observers and mothers rated infant behavior in the home on dimensions of temperament once a week for eight weeks. Although week-to-week correlations were modest, aggregates of the eight observations had high reliability for both observers and mothers. When direct observations were compared with mother reports, little evidence of mother-observer…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Infant Behavior, Infants, Interrater Reliability

Spiker, Donna; And Others – Child Development, 1992
Mothers, teachers, and assistant teachers completed two measures of child behavior when children born prematurely were two and three years old. Interinstrument correlations for total scores, and the stability of the Behavior Check List from two to three years, were moderate. Interrater agreements between teachers and assistant teachers were…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Birth Weight, Interrater Reliability, Mothers

Feinberg, Mark; Neiderhiser, Jenae; Howe, George; Hetherington, E. Mavis – Child Development, 2001
Examined low interrater agreement by decomposing common and unique variance among parent, adolescent, and observer reports of parental warmth and negativity into genetic and environmental factors. Model-fitting analyses findings generally supported predictions for warmth and negativity at Family and Individual levels. At the Social level, genetic…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Environmental Influences, Heredity, Interrater Reliability

Smith, Peter K.; Vollstedt, Ralph – Child Development, 1985
Five common play criteria were applied by subjects to a videotape of nursery school children's behavior, rated separately for occurrence of play. The idea that play is best predicted by a combination of criteria was supported by the finding that, when more criteria occurred simultaneously, the more certainly a judgment of play was implied.…
Descriptors: Criteria, Day Care, Definitions, Early Childhood Education