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Carroll Annemaree Forrest Kylee Sanders-O’Connor Emma Flynn Libby Bower Julie M. Fynes-Clinton Samuel York Ashley Ziaei Maryam 《Social Psychology of Education》2022,25(2-3):441-469
Social Psychology of Education - Concerns regarding high rates of teacher stress and burnout are present globally. Yet there is limited current data regarding the severity of stress, or the role of... 相似文献
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Amber Yaholkoski Kylee Hurl Jennifer Theule 《Journal of Infant, Child, and Adolescent Psychotherapy》2016,15(2):95-103
The Circle of Security (COS) intervention aims to teach caregivers to become more responsive to their children’s needs. The present study is a meta-analysis that examined the efficacy of the COS intervention in relation to child attachment patterns, quality of caregiving, caregiver self-efficacy, and caregiver depression. Studies were eligible if they carried out a version of the COS intervention and provided quantitative data amenable to meta-analysis. A total of 10 studies were determined eligible for this meta-analysis. A random effects model was used and Hedge’s g was calculated for the overall effect sizes. Results indicated a medium effect size for the efficacy of the intervention for child attachment security (g = 0.65, p = .003, k = 4), quality of caregiving (g = 0.60, p = .012, k = 4) and reduction of caregiver depression (g = 0.53, p < .001, k = 3). There was a significant large effect for improved caregiver self-efficacy (g = 0.98, p < .001, k = 2). Results suggest that while the efficacy of the COS intervention demonstrates promising results, more research is needed. 相似文献
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Social power affects the manner in which people view themselves and act toward others, a finding that has attracted broad
interest from the social and political sciences. However, there has been little interest from those within cognitive neuroscience.
Here, we demonstrate that the effects of power extend beyond social interaction and invoke elementary spatial biases in behavior
consistent with preferential hemispheric activation. In particular, participants who felt relatively powerless, compared with
those who felt more powerful, were more likely to bisect horizontal lines to the left of center, and bump into the right-hand
(as opposed to the left-hand) side when walking through a narrow passage. These results suggest that power induces hemispheric
differences in visuomotor behavior, indicating that this ubiquitous phenomenon affects not only how we interact with one another,
but also how we interact with the physical world. 相似文献
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