Consistency in the order of individuals in a group across substantial lengths of time-stability-is a central concept in developmental science for several reasons. Stability underscores the meaningfulness of individual differences in psychological phenomena; stability informs about the origins, nature, and overall developmental course of psychological phenomena; stability signals individual status and so affects the environment, experience, and development; stability has both theoretical and clinical implications for individual functioning; and stability helps to establish that a measure constitutes a consequential individual-differences metric. In this three-wave prospective longitudinal study (Ns = 40 infants and mothers), we examined stab...
The study of infants’ interactive style and social stress response to repeated stressful exposures i...
A longitudinal investigation which was principally exploratory in nature was undertaken in order to ...
Temperament and parental control are two important factors that influence the early development of c...
Consistency in the order of individuals in a group across short periods of time-reliability-is both ...
In two short-term longitudinal studies, infant expressivity and maternal responsiveness to infant ex...
Mother-infant dyads were observed weekly at their homes for a 15-month period. In this way longitudi...
Mother-infant dyads were observed weekly at their homes for a 15-month period. In this way longitudi...
Central to this thesis is the question whether age-determined periods of emotional instability can b...
Stability over time and consistency across contexts in the interactive behaviors of 10 girls and 10 ...
The relations between maternal control style, sensitivity, and childrearing attitudes on one hand an...
This study examined the stability and continuity of early-identified behavior problems and the facto...
This study examined the stability and continuity of early-identified behavior problems and the facto...
An attempt was made at validating van de Rijt-Plooij & Plooij's (1992) theory that infants go th...
There is a considerable amount of theoretical and empirical research on child temperament; yet there...
Objective: This study examined four types of stability (factorial equivalence over time, mean-level ...
The study of infants’ interactive style and social stress response to repeated stressful exposures i...
A longitudinal investigation which was principally exploratory in nature was undertaken in order to ...
Temperament and parental control are two important factors that influence the early development of c...
Consistency in the order of individuals in a group across short periods of time-reliability-is both ...
In two short-term longitudinal studies, infant expressivity and maternal responsiveness to infant ex...
Mother-infant dyads were observed weekly at their homes for a 15-month period. In this way longitudi...
Mother-infant dyads were observed weekly at their homes for a 15-month period. In this way longitudi...
Central to this thesis is the question whether age-determined periods of emotional instability can b...
Stability over time and consistency across contexts in the interactive behaviors of 10 girls and 10 ...
The relations between maternal control style, sensitivity, and childrearing attitudes on one hand an...
This study examined the stability and continuity of early-identified behavior problems and the facto...
This study examined the stability and continuity of early-identified behavior problems and the facto...
An attempt was made at validating van de Rijt-Plooij & Plooij's (1992) theory that infants go th...
There is a considerable amount of theoretical and empirical research on child temperament; yet there...
Objective: This study examined four types of stability (factorial equivalence over time, mean-level ...
The study of infants’ interactive style and social stress response to repeated stressful exposures i...
A longitudinal investigation which was principally exploratory in nature was undertaken in order to ...
Temperament and parental control are two important factors that influence the early development of c...