scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

A Responsive Parenting Intervention: The Optimal Timing Across Early Childhood for Impacting Maternal Behaviors and Child Outcomes

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
Examination of optimal timing (infancy, toddler-preschool, or both) for facilitating responsive parenting and the intervention effects on maternal behaviors and child social and communication skills for children who vary in biological risk found thatBehaviors that required responsiveness to the child's changing signals required the intervention across both the early and later periods.
Abstract
This study examined the optimal timing (infancy, toddler-preschool, or both) for facilitating responsive parenting and the intervention effects on maternal behaviors and child social and communication skills for children who vary in biological risk. The intervention during infancy, Playing and Learning Strategies (PALS I), showed strong changes in maternal affective-emotional and cognitively responsive behaviors and infants' development. However, it was hypothesized that a 2nd intervention dose in the toddler-preschool period was needed for optimal results. Families from the PALS I phase were rerandomized into either the PALS II, the toddler-preschool phase, or a Developmental Assessment Sessions condition, resulting in 4 groups. Facilitation of maternal warmth occurred best with the PALS I intervention, while cognitive responsive behaviors were best supported with the PALS II intervention. Behaviors that required responsiveness to the child's changing signals (contingent responsiveness, redirecting) required the intervention across both the early and later periods.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The Effects of Poverty on the Mental, Emotional, and Behavioral Health of Children and Youth: Implications for Prevention.

TL;DR: It is illustrated how a better understanding of the mechanisms of effect by which poverty impacts children's mental, emotional, and behavioral health is valuable in designing effective preventive interventions for those in poverty.
Journal ArticleDOI

Child development in the context of adversity: experiential canalization of brain and behavior.

TL;DR: The effects of poverty-related adversity on child development is examined, drawing upon psychobiological principles of experiential canalization and the biological embedding of experience to consider adaptive processes in response to adversity as an aspect of children's development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Salivary Cortisol Mediates Effects of Poverty and Parenting on Executive Functions in Early Childhood

TL;DR: In a predominantly low-income population-based longitudinal sample of 1,292 children followed from birth, higher level of salivary cortisol assessed at ages 7, 15, and 24 months was uniquely associated with lower executive function ability and to a lesser extent IQ at age 3 years.
Journal ArticleDOI

Responsive Feeding Is Embedded in a Theoretical Framework of Responsive Parenting

TL;DR: Evidence for the practice and developmental benefits of responsive parenting are examined with a view to providing a theoretical basis for responsive feeding and recommendations are made that future efforts to promote healthy growth and to prevent underweight and overweight among young children incorporate and evaluate responsive feeding.
References
More filters
Book

Statistical Power Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences

TL;DR: The concepts of power analysis are discussed in this paper, where Chi-square Tests for Goodness of Fit and Contingency Tables, t-Test for Means, and Sign Test are used.
Journal ArticleDOI

SPSS and SAS procedures for estimating indirect effects in simple mediation models.

TL;DR: It is argued the importance of directly testing the significance of indirect effects and provided SPSS and SAS macros that facilitate estimation of the indirect effect with a normal theory approach and a bootstrap approach to obtaining confidence intervals to enhance the frequency of formal mediation tests in the psychology literature.
Journal ArticleDOI

Asymptotic Confidence Intervals for Indirect Effects in Structural Equation Models

TL;DR: For comments on an earlier draft of this chapter and for detailed advice I am indebted to Robert M. Hauser, Halliman H. Winsborough, Toni Richards, several anonymous reviewers, and the editor of this volume as discussed by the authors.
Book

Patterns of Attachment: A Psychological Study of the Strange Situation

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of repetition of the "strange situation" on infants' behavior at home and in the classroom were discussed, as well as the relationship between infants' behaviour in the situation and their mothers' behaviour at home.
Related Papers (5)