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Kimberly L. Goodman

Researcher at Johns Hopkins University

Publications -  19
Citations -  855

Kimberly L. Goodman is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 12 publications receiving 727 citations.

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Principles Underlying the Use of Multiple Informants' Reports

TL;DR: In this review, the authors advance a framework (Operations Triad Model) outlining general principles for using and interpreting informants' reports and provide supportive evidence for this framework and discuss its implications for hypothesis testing, study design, and quantitative review.
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The Longitudinal Consistency of Mother-Child Reporting Discrepancies of Parental Monitoring and Their Ability to Predict Child Delinquent Behaviors Two Years Later

TL;DR: Mother–child discrepancies in reports of parental monitoring can be employed as new individual differences measurements in developmental psychopathology research, suggesting that mother–child reporting discrepancies provided information distinct from the absolute frequency of reports.
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Understanding and Using Informants’ Reporting Discrepancies of Youth Victimization: A Conceptual Model and Recommendations for Research

TL;DR: A preliminary conceptual model is proposed that considers how and why discrepancies between parents’ and youths’ ratings of child victimization may be related to poor adjustment outcomes and coping processes that explain why discrepancies may predict increases in youth maladjustment.
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Discrepancies in parents’ and children’s reports of child emotion regulation

TL;DR: In this article, discrepancies between mothers' and children's reports of child emotion regulation were examined for key aspects of emotion regulation (i.e., inhibition and dysregulated expression) and for three emotions (anger, sadness, worry).
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Physiological correlates of peer victimization and aggression in African American urban adolescents

TL;DR: Investigating physiological correlates of peer victimization and aggression in a longitudinal study of stress, physiology, and adjustment revealed significant Group × SCI Phase interactions for salivary AA (sAA), but not for cortisol.