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Bronia Arnott
Researcher at Newcastle University
Publications - 32
Citations - 1600
Bronia Arnott is an academic researcher from Newcastle University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Overweight. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 27 publications receiving 1369 citations. Previous affiliations of Bronia Arnott include Durham University.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Young children's trust in their mother's claims: longitudinal links with attachment security in infancy.
Kathleen H. Corriveau,Paul L. Harris,Elizabeth Meins,Charles Fernyhough,Bronia Arnott,Lorna Elliott,Beth Liddle,Alexandra Hearn,Lucia Vittorini,Marc de Rosnay +9 more
TL;DR: The strategy of relying on the mother or the stranger, depending on the available perceptual cues, was especially evident among secure children, whereas insecure-resistant children displayed more.
Journal ArticleDOI
Links among antenatal attachment representations, postnatal mind–mindedness, and infant attachment security: A preliminary study of mothers and fathers
Bronia Arnott,Elizabeth Meins +1 more
TL;DR: A preliminary longitudinal analysis suggested that parental mind-mindedness may help explain intergenerational transfer of attachment security.
Journal ArticleDOI
Repetitive behaviours in typically developing 2‐year‐olds
Susan R. Leekam,Jonathan Tandos,Helen McConachie,Elizabeth Meins,Kathryn N. Parkinson,Charlotte M Wright,Michelle Turner,Bronia Arnott,Lucia Vittorini,Ann Le Couteur +9 more
TL;DR: The results support the proposal that repetitive behaviours represent a continuum of functioning that extends to the typically developing child population.
Journal ArticleDOI
Mind-mindedness and theory of mind: Mediating roles of language and perspectival symbolic play
TL;DR: Investigation of relationships among indices of maternal mind-mindedness and children's internal state vocabulary and perspectival symbolic play and theory of mind found an indirect link between appropriate comments and ToM via children's concurrent receptive verbal ability.
Journal ArticleDOI
Mind-Mindedness as a Multidimensional Construct: Appropriate and Nonattuned Mind-Related Comments Independently Predict Infant-Mother Attachment in a Socially Diverse Sample.
Elizabeth Meins,Charles Fernyhough,Marc de Rosnay,Bronia Arnott,Susan R. Leekam,Michelle Turner +5 more
TL;DR: Findings highlight how appropriate and non-attuned mind-related comments make independent contributions to attachment and suggest that mind-mindedness is best characterized as a multidimensional construct.