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Keith F. Widaman

Researcher at University of California, Riverside

Publications -  259
Citations -  35391

Keith F. Widaman is an academic researcher from University of California, Riverside. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognition & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 70, co-authored 240 publications receiving 31852 citations. Previous affiliations of Keith F. Widaman include University of California, Berkeley & University of California.

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Parent Perceptions of Inclusive Practices for Their Children with Significant Cognitive Disabilities

TL;DR: This paper found that parents were more positive regarding the impact of inclusion on mutual social benefits, acceptance, and treatment of their child and more apprehensive regarding the negative impact of the inclusion on the quality of educational services their child receives.
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Posttraumatic stress following acute medical trauma in children: A proposed model of bio-psycho-social processes during the peri-trauma period

TL;DR: A new model utilizing the bio-psycho-social framework and focusing on peri-trauma processes of acute medical events is proposed, which can inform early identification of at-risk children, preventive interventions and clinical care.
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Evaluation of the Interactionist Model of Socioeconomic Status and Problem Behavior: A Developmental Cascade across Generations

TL;DR: The findings showed that Generation 1 (G1) adolescent problem behavior predicted later G1 SES, family stress, and parental emotional investments, as well as the next generation of children's problem behavior, consistent with the view that processes of both social selection and social causation account for the association between SES and human development.
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Cognitive sex differences in reasoning tasks: Evidence from Brazilian samples of educational settings

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the principal axis factoring of test scores to determine whether sex differences existed at the level of general intelligence and found that females outperformed males on the Attention Test (AC), the Raven's Standard Progressive Matrices (SPM), and the Brazilian Cognitive Battery (BPR5), using four large samples (total N = ǫ6780), residing in the states of Minas Gerais and Sao Paulo.