Rinne, Gabrielle R Barclay, Margot E Somers, Jennifer A Mahrer, Nicole E Shalowitz, Madeleine U Ramey, Sharon Landesman Schetter, Christine Dunkel Lee, Steve S
Although maternal stress during pregnancy and even before conception shapes offspring risk for mental health problems, relatively little is known about the mechanisms through which these associations operate. In theory, preconception and prenatal stress may affect offspring mental health by influencing child responses to postnatal caregiving. To ad...
Birkeneder, Sandy L Bullen, Jennifer McIntyre, Nancy Zajic, Matthew C Lerro, Lindsay Solomon, Marjorie Sparapani, Nicole Mundy, Peter
Preliminary evidence from the Childhood Joint Attention Rating Scale (C-JARS; Mundy et al., 2017) suggests symptoms related to diminished joint attention and the spontaneous sharing of experience with others can be assessed with a parent-report measure in children and adolescents with autism. This study was designed to expand on the previous study ...
Krems, Jaimie Arona Merrie, Laureon A Rodriguez, Nina N Williams, Keelah EG
Manalo-Pedro, Erin Enriquez, Laura E Nájera, Jennifer R Ro, Annie
Restrictive immigration policies harm the mental health of undocumented immigrants and their U.S. citizen family members. As a sociopolitical stressor, threat to family due to immigration policy can heighten anxiety, yet it is unclear whether political engagement helps immigrant-origin students to cope. We used a cross-sectional survey of college s...
Schwartz, Flora Chernyak, Nadia
Theories of justice suggest that it serves two main purposes: punishment and restoration. Although punishment emerges early and has been well-documented, little is known about the contexts in which young children engage in restorative practices like compensation for victims. The current study investigated whether children's engagement in compensati...
Gupta, Goirik Simmons, Zachary L Roney, James R
Prior research has produced mixed findings regarding whether women feel more attractive during the fertile phase of the menstrual cycle. Here, we analyzed cycle phase and hormonal predictors of women's self-perceived attractiveness (SPA) assessed within a daily diary study. Forty-three women indicated their SPA, sexual desire, and interest in their...
Zerwas, Felicia K Ford, Brett Q John, Oliver P Mauss, Iris B
Previous work suggests that sometimes the more people value happiness, the less happy they are. For whom and why is this the case? To answer these questions, we examined a model of happiness pursuit that disentangles two previously conflated individual differences related to valuing happiness. The first individual difference operates at the strengt...
Kuehn, Kevin S Piccirillo, Marilyn L Kuczynski, Adam M King, Kevin M Depp, Colin A Foster, Katherine T
IntroductionRecent technology has enabled researchers to collect ecological momentary assessments (EMA) to examine within-person correlates of suicidal thoughts. Prior studies examined generalized temporal dynamics of emotions and suicidal thinking over brief periods, but it is not yet known how variable these processes are across people.MethodWe u...
Sweeny, Kate
Academic abstractPatience has been of great interest to religious scholars, philosophers, and psychological scientists. Their efforts have produced numerous insights but no cohesive theoretical approach to understanding the broad set of experiences people label as patience. I propose a novel view of patience, one that departs from but ties together...
Kadlec, Jan Walsh, Catherine R Sadé, Uri Amir, Ariel Rissman, Jesse Ramot, Michal
Abstract: Surging interest in individual differences has faced setbacks in light of recent replication crises in psychology, for example in brain-wide association studies exploring brain-behavior correlations. A crucial component of replicability for individual differences studies, which is often assumed but not directly tested, is the reliability ...