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The article introduces the Parental Sensitivity Assessment Scale (PSAS) and examines the influence of the PSAS score and other factors on the general cognitive level in pre-school children born with very low birth weight (VLBW). McCarthy general cognitive index (GCI) was obtained for 102 VLBW and 92 normal birth weight (NBW) control children in Denmark in the mid-1980s. The mean ages of the two groups were 52.4 vs. 53.1 months. Parental sensitivity was assessed using PSAS. There was no significant difference in the mean PSAS score between the two birth weight groups (p > 0.3). Birth weight group (p < 0.001) and mother's schooling (p= 0.026) significantly correlated with GCI in the children. The PSAS score was highly significantly correlated to the variance of the GCI (p < 0.001), which was not explained by VLBW and mother's schooling. We found no interactional effect between parental sensitivity and birth weight group (p > 0.5) - the prematurely born children were not more affected by low parental sensitivity than were the control children. 相似文献
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Esbjørn BH Bender PK Reinholdt-Dunne ML Munck LA Ollendick TH 《Clinical child and family psychology review》2012,15(2):129-143
Anxiety disorders are among the most common psychiatric disorders in childhood. Nonetheless, theoretical knowledge of the
development and maintenance of childhood anxiety disorders is still in its infancy. Recently, research has begun to investigate
the influence of emotion regulation on anxiety disorders. Although a relation between anxiety disorders and emotion regulation
difficulties has been demonstrated, little attention has been given to the question of why anxious individuals have difficulties
regulating their emotions. The present review examines the evidence of the link between emotion regulation and anxiety. It
also explores the unique contributions of attachment style and dysfunctional emotion regulation to the development of anxiety
disorders. 相似文献
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Johannes Munck 《Studia Theologica》2013,67(1):130-147
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A cohort of extremely prematurely born children and matched term controls was assessed at 5 years of age. The parents completed a questionnaire on their behavioral and social development. The purpose was to illuminate whether the children's general intellectual ability and parental sensitivity were associated with behavioral and social development. The index children exhibited more hyperactive behavior and had poorer social skills than the controls. Lower Full Scale IQ (FSIQ) was associated with outward reacting and hyperactive behavior and poorer social skills. Sensitive parenting was associated with less outward reacting and less hyperactive behavior. When controlling for differences in FSIQ and parental sensitivity, the index children persisted to have an increased risk of exhibiting hyperactive behavior but not poorer social skills. The index children with normal intellectual development, however, did not exhibit more behavioral problems or poorer social skills than the control children did. 相似文献
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