M
Marc H. Bornstein
Researcher at National Institutes of Health
Publications - 696
Citations - 41036
Marc H. Bornstein is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Child development & Child rearing. The author has an hindex of 100, co-authored 663 publications receiving 36337 citations. Previous affiliations of Marc H. Bornstein include Max Planck Society & New York University.
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Clinically depressed and typically developing mother-infant dyads: Domain base rates and correspondences, relationship contingencies and attunement.
TL;DR: In this paper, the role of maternal clinical depression in mother-infant interaction by turning a microanalytic lens on four substantive relationship issues: base rates, correspondences, contingencies, and attunement.
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The Handbook of Parenting (Volume 2): Biology and Ecology of Parenting
Tom Luster,Marc H. Bornstein +1 more
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Culture and Social Change in Mothers’ and Fathers’ Individualism, Collectivism and Parenting Attitudes
Jennifer E. Lansford,Susannah Zietz,Suha M. Al-Hassan,Dario Bacchini,Marc H. Bornstein,Lei Chang,Kirby Deater-Deckard,Laura Di Giunta,Kenneth A. Dodge,Sevtap Gurdal,Qin Liu,Qian Long,Paul Oburu,Concetta Pastorelli,Ann T. Skinner,Emma Sorbring,Sombat Tapanya,Laurence Steinberg,Liliana Maria Uribe Tirado,Saengduean Yotanyamaneewong,Liane Peña Alampay +20 more
TL;DR: This article examined parents in nine countries that varied widely in country-level individualism rankings and found that more variance was accounted for by within-culture than between-culture factors for parents' individualism, collectivism, progressive parenting attitudes, and authoritarian parenting attitudes.
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Children's Academic, Artistic, and Athletic Competencies: Successes Are in the Eye of the Beholder.
TL;DR: This study examined similarities and differences in child, mother, father, and teacher reports of children’s competencies across multiple domains of math, reading, music, and sports from two separate perspectives of rater agreement, mean level and order association.