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Anahid Akbaryan; Reese C. Burkey; Peter J. Ramirez; Ashley L. Walker; JungWon Choi; Sejal Mistry-Patel; Jennifer L. Kling; Rebecca J. Brooker – Child Development, 2025
Despite well-documented behavioral changes, the development of neuropsychological substrates underlying inhibitory control remains unknown, hindering understanding of this construct over time. Stability and change in N2, a neural correlate of inhibitory control, and its crosslagged, bidirectional associations with maternal emotion characteristics…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Behavior Development, Inhibition, Mothers
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Laure Lu Chen; Jean Anne Heng; Chengyi Xu; Michelle R. Ellefson; Miryam Edwards; Hana D'Souza; Elian Fink; Mikeda Jess; Louise Gray; Caoimhe Dempsey; Mishika Mehrotra; Siu Ching Wong; Catherine Wu; Brittany Huang; Jiayin Zheng; Zhen Wu; Rory T. Devine; Claire Hughes – Child Development, 2025
Cross-site comparisons indicate that East Asian children typically excel on tests of executive function (EF), but interpreting this contrast is made difficult by both the heavy reliance on testing in school settings and by the scarcity of studies that assess across-site measurement invariance. Addressing these gaps, our study included remote…
Descriptors: Children, Executive Function, Adjustment (to Environment), Child Development
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Laura Tietz; Felix Warneken; Sebastian Grueneisen – Developmental Science, 2025
Reciprocity is a cornerstone of human cooperation, motivating individuals to assist each other at a personal cost, resulting in mutual long-term benefits. However, reciprocity can conflict with honesty norms, such as when returning favors to previous benefactors requires individuals to act dishonestly. The resulting moral dilemmas are difficult to…
Descriptors: Young Children, Prosocial Behavior, Cheating, Child Behavior
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Pauline Goger; Rachel Nam; Nathan Lowry; Christine B. Cha; Jessica Ribeiro; Xieyining Huang; Kathryn R. Fox – Journal of Applied Research on Children, 2025
Suicidal thoughts and behaviors (STBs) in youth are prevalent and impairing, but available psychosocial treatments are difficult to access and show limited efficacy. "Prevention strategies" are interventions intended to be implemented during relative well-periods before impairment or other adverse outcomes set in and therefore help avoid…
Descriptors: Suicide, Prevention, Intervention, Children
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Olifa J. Asmara; Alina Morawska; April Hoang; Yulina Eva Riany – Infant and Child Development, 2025
Child self-regulation has been considered a valuable skill that shapes a child's future life trajectory. Parents have crucial roles in its development, making parenting interventions a strategic means to promote child self-regulation. Nonetheless, there are no available measures of child self-regulation suitable for assessing outcomes in…
Descriptors: Test Construction, Test Validity, Children, Preadolescents
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Betül Sürek; Belma Tugrul; Ilknur Tarman – Journal of Inquiry Based Activities, 2025
This study was carried out to examine picture books prepared for children in the 3-6 age group in terms of supporting emotion regulation skills. The sample group of the study consists of 113 domestic or translated children's picture books published in Türkiye between 2010 and 2022, selected using the criterion sampling method. The data were…
Descriptors: Picture Books, Emotional Response, Self Control, Coping
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Aimee K. Rovane; Robert M. Hock; Chih-Hsiang Yang; Kimberly J. Hills – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2025
Parents play a substantial role in their children's emotion regulation (ER) abilities. Children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) often have difficulties regulating their emotions, which can manifest as externalizing behavioral issues. Parents of children with ASD facilitate their children's ER development in response to unique challenges and…
Descriptors: Parent Role, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Emotional Response, Self Control
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Jingjing Zhu; Shuhui Xiang; Xiaomin Liu; Yanqi Li; Yan Li – Early Child Development and Care, 2025
This study examined how peer acceptance mediates the link between shyness and internalizing problems in preschoolers, and how teacher-child closeness moderates this pathway. The study sampled 180 children (M[subscript age] = 58.81, SD = 5.35; girl = 83, boy = 97) from two public kindergartens in Shanghai. Mothers reported on children's shyness…
Descriptors: Shyness, Peer Acceptance, Self Destructive Behavior, Kindergarten
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Shuyi Zhai; Ying Liang; Chenxin Lu; Jie He – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2024
Parenting style plays an important role in children's externalizing behaviors. Differences in physiological regulation among children may lead to variations in whether or to what extent parenting style influences them. The present study aimed to investigate the effect of parenting styles on young children's development of externalizing behaviors…
Descriptors: Parenting Styles, Child Behavior, Behavior Problems, Physiology
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Anat Moed – Child Development Perspectives, 2024
According to coercion theory (Patterson, 1982, 2016), children's aggression is developed and maintained through transactional processes between parents and their children that unfold over time. The theory provides a model of the behavioral contingencies that explain how parents and children mutually "train" each other to behave in ways…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Psychological Patterns, Parent Influence, Child Behavior
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Xingchao Wang; Yaojing Ma; Pengcheng Wang – Psychology in the Schools, 2026
Children's bullying perpetration has become a serious and urgent problem. Based on the stress coping model, the current study attempted to test whether perceived economic stress was significantly related to children's bullying perpetration, and whether perceived discrimination mediated this association and teacher acceptance moderated this…
Descriptors: Bullying, Stress Variables, Child Behavior, Social Discrimination
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Lena Söldner; Markus Paulus – European Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2025
The emergence of moral emotions such as guilt is central in moral and prosocial development. Guilt is an important psychological factor, which motivates prosocial behaviour and is credited for multiple social functions. Importantly, it remains unclear what determines the extent to which children show guilt. The current study examined two factors…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Anxiety, Ethics, Moral Development
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Freya Wright; Anastasia Hronis; Rachel Roberts; Lynette Roberts; Ian Kneebone – Educational and Developmental Psychologist, 2025
Objective: People with intellectual disabilities have historically often been excluded from cognitive based therapies, due to their cognitive deficits. However, adults with intellectual disabilities have been found to have the core cognitive abilities necessary to engage in Cognitive Behaviour Therapy. Despite this emerging evidence, the capacity…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disability, Cognitive Restructuring, Children, Child Behavior
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Irene Monzonís-Carda; Mireia Adelantado-Renau; Maria Reyes Beltran-Valls; Diego Moliner-Urdiales – Psychology in the Schools, 2025
Adolescents' mental health and academic performance are subjects of paramount interest. Previous studies have revealed a strong association between these constructs during school years. However, there is little evidence about the dual-factor model of mental health, which includes a combination of psychological well-being and distress indicators,…
Descriptors: Mental Health, Performance, Adolescents, Psychological Patterns
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Meagan R. Talbott; Gregory S. Young; Sally Ozonoff – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2025
Identifying infants at elevated likelihood for autism and other developmental differences in the first year of life remains a significant challenge. This study explored associations between behavioral differences in infancy and developmental outcomes in toddlerhood. We conducted a secondary data analysis of 256 infants with an older autistic…
Descriptors: Infants, At Risk Persons, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Developmental Disabilities
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