AbstractThis study compares externalizing and internalizing behaviors in toddlerhood and preschool years across 66 non-vulnerable and vulnerable children attending an educational daycare (n=45) or remaining under parental care (n=21). Results indicate that, for non-vulnerable children, type of care isn’t associated with externalizing and internalizing behaviors. However, for vulnerable children, attending a daycare is associated with a reduction in externalizing behaviors and with higher (but also decreasing) internalizing behaviors between 2 and 4 years of age. In contrast, parental care is associated with an increase in both externalizing and internalizing behaviors
Background: Over the past few decades there has been a dramatic increase in maternal employment and,...
Empirical evidence links sensitive parenting behavior to positive developmental trajectories in chil...
Internalizing problems (IP) comprise the most common form of psychological difficulty in early child...
Background and Aims. Externalizing behaviors, or more informally, aggressive or hyperactive behavio...
This study examined the infancy- and toddler-age precursors of children’s later externalizing proble...
Children who attend Head Start program are impacted in externalizing/internalizing behaviors, and ma...
How and why do internalizing and externalizing problems, psychopathological problems from different ...
The aim was to investigate the contribution of familial risk to externalizing behaviors (FR-EXT), pe...
textabstractThe aim was to investigate the contribution of familial risk to externalizing behaviors ...
Preventing problem behavior requires an understanding of earlier factors that are amenable to interv...
The aim was to investigate the contribution of familial risk to externalizing behaviors (FR-EXT), pe...
This is an author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published arti...
Attachment theory provides an interesting background for thinking about externalizing behavior (EB) ...
The aim was to investigate the contribution of familial risk to externalizing behaviors (FR-EXT), pe...
BACKGROUND: Over the past few decades there has been a dramatic increase in maternal employment and,...
Background: Over the past few decades there has been a dramatic increase in maternal employment and,...
Empirical evidence links sensitive parenting behavior to positive developmental trajectories in chil...
Internalizing problems (IP) comprise the most common form of psychological difficulty in early child...
Background and Aims. Externalizing behaviors, or more informally, aggressive or hyperactive behavio...
This study examined the infancy- and toddler-age precursors of children’s later externalizing proble...
Children who attend Head Start program are impacted in externalizing/internalizing behaviors, and ma...
How and why do internalizing and externalizing problems, psychopathological problems from different ...
The aim was to investigate the contribution of familial risk to externalizing behaviors (FR-EXT), pe...
textabstractThe aim was to investigate the contribution of familial risk to externalizing behaviors ...
Preventing problem behavior requires an understanding of earlier factors that are amenable to interv...
The aim was to investigate the contribution of familial risk to externalizing behaviors (FR-EXT), pe...
This is an author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published arti...
Attachment theory provides an interesting background for thinking about externalizing behavior (EB) ...
The aim was to investigate the contribution of familial risk to externalizing behaviors (FR-EXT), pe...
BACKGROUND: Over the past few decades there has been a dramatic increase in maternal employment and,...
Background: Over the past few decades there has been a dramatic increase in maternal employment and,...
Empirical evidence links sensitive parenting behavior to positive developmental trajectories in chil...
Internalizing problems (IP) comprise the most common form of psychological difficulty in early child...