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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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Journal ArticleDOI

Stability of child temperament: Multiple moderation by child and mother characteristics

TL;DR: A large sample (˜10,000) is used to trace the stability of temperament from 3 to 6 years in three waves and considers child age, gender, birth order, and term status as well as mother age, education, anxiety, and depression as moderators of stability.
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Neurobehavioral outcomes in diseases of childhood. Individual change models for pediatric human immunodeficiency viruses.

TL;DR: Approaches to the assessment of individual change that may provide alternatives to more traditional approaches to the Assessment of neurobehavioral outcomes in children with chronic diseases are outlined.
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Sex-Specific Automatic Responses to Infant Cries: TMS Reveals Greater Excitability in Females than Males in Motor Evoked Potentials.

TL;DR: The brains of adult females appear to be tuned to respond to infant cries with automatic motor excitation, and the 100-ms latency of this response is not compatible with a voluntary reaction to the stimulus but suggests an automatic, bottom-up audiomotor association.
Book ChapterDOI

The Context of Development for Young Children from Cocaine-Abusing Families

TL;DR: The stereotypes about cocaine use have always abounded in stereotypes (Courtwright, 1982; Musto, 1973) and popular notions about the lifestyle of cocaine abuse have been abounding in stereotypes as mentioned in this paper, and these stereotypes can be seen in images of parents who abuse cocaine and portrayals of children who were exposed to cocaine prenatally.
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Fostering optimal development and averting detrimental development: Prescriptions, proscriptions, and specificity

TL;DR: In this article, a fuller explication of the ecological contextual relational developmental systems framework along with the specificity principle of development is presented. But it does not consider the relationship and context as drivers of development.