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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Examining The Bidirectional Relationships Between Maternal Intrusiveness And Child Anxiety: A Longitudinal Study From Infancy To Middle Childhood, Hannah Hunter
Masters Theses
Myriad parenting behaviors have been linked to the development of internalizing disorders in children. Intrusive parenting, which is characterized by autonomy-limiting behaviors that hold the parent’s agenda above that of the child, seems to uniquely contribute to the onset of child anxiety. In laboratory tasks, anxious mothers demonstrate greater levels of intrusiveness when compared to nonanxious mothers, suggesting that intrusive behaviors may be one mechanism through which anxiety is transmitted from parent and child. Other studies suggest that parental intrusiveness is evoked in the presence of an anxious child, providing evidence for bidirectionality. The current study investigated the bidirectional effects …
Attention Bias In Youth In Response To Maternal Behaviors: A Mobile Eye Tracking Study, Elizabeth A. Cousins
Attention Bias In Youth In Response To Maternal Behaviors: A Mobile Eye Tracking Study, Elizabeth A. Cousins
Chancellor’s Honors Program Projects
No abstract provided.