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Carlo Schuengel

Researcher at Public Health Research Institute

Publications -  271
Citations -  9708

Carlo Schuengel is an academic researcher from Public Health Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Intellectual disability & Attachment theory. The author has an hindex of 46, co-authored 246 publications receiving 8570 citations. Previous affiliations of Carlo Schuengel include VU University Medical Center & University of Amsterdam.

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Disorganized attachment in early childhood: meta-analysis of precursors, concomitants, and sequelae

TL;DR: The current series of meta-analyses have established the reliability and discriminant validity of disorganized infant attachment and the search for the mechanisms leading to disorganization has just started.
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The measurement of dissociation in normal and clinical populations. Meta-analytic validation of the dissociative experiences scale (des)

TL;DR: The Dissociative Experiences Scale (DES) as mentioned in this paper has been used in over 100 studies on dissociation and has shown excellent convergent validity in other dissociative experiences questionnaires and inter-view schedules.
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Frightening maternal behavior linking unresolved loss and disorganized infant attachment

TL;DR: Main and Hesse's (1990) model in which frightening (threatening, frightened, or dissociated) parental behavior explains why infants of parents with unresolved loss develop disorganized attachment relationships was tested and predicted infant dis organized attachment irrespective of maternal security.
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Disruptions in foster care: A review and meta-analysis

TL;DR: This paper examined risk and protective factors associated with placement breakdown across k ǫ=26 studies of 20,650 children in foster families and found a large combined effect size for behavior problems when analyzed in multivariate models.
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Narrowing the Transmission Gap: A Synthesis of Three Decades of Research on Intergenerational Transmission of Attachment

TL;DR: It is confirmed that intergenerational transmission of attachment could not be fully explained by caregiver sensitivity, with more recent studies narrowing but not bridging the "transmission gap."