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Nameability supports rule-based category learning in children and adults Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-09-20 Martin Zettersten, Catherine Bredemann, Megan Kaul, Kaitlynn Ellis, Haley A. Vlach, Heather Kirkorian, Gary Lupyan
The present study tested the hypothesis that verbal labels support category induction by providing compact hypotheses. Ninety-seven 4- to 6-year-old children (M = 63.2 months; 46 female, 51 male; 77% White, 8% more than one race, 4% Asian, and 3% Black; tested 2018) and 90 adults (M = 20.1 years; 70 female, 20 male) in the Midwestern United States learned novel categories with features that were easy
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Girls are good at STEM: Opening minds and providing evidence reduce boys' stereotyping of girls' STEM ability Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-09-18 Emily N. Cyr, Kathryn M. Kroeper, Hilary B. Bergsieker, Tara C. Dennehy, Christine Logel, Jennifer R. Steele, Rita A. Knasel, W. Tyler Hartwig, Priscilla Shum, Stephanie L. Reeves, Odilia Dys-Steenbergen, Amrit Litt, Christopher B. Lok, Taylor Ballinger, Haemi Nam, Crystal Tse, Amanda L. Forest, Mark Zanna, Sheryl Staub-French, Mary Wells, Toni Schmader, Stephen C. Wright, Steven J. Spencer
Girls and women face persistent negative stereotyping within STEM (science, technology, engineering, mathematics). This field intervention was designed to improve boys' perceptions of girls' STEM ability. Boys (N = 667; mostly White and East Asian) aged 9–15 years in Canadian STEM summer camps (2017–2019) had an intervention or control conversation with trained camp staff. The intervention was a multi-stage
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Theta power relates to infant object encoding in naturalistic mother-infant interactions Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-09-15 Christine Michel, Daniel Matthes, Stefanie Hoehl
This study investigates infants' neural and behavioral responses to maternal ostensive signals during naturalistic mother-infant interactions and their effects on object encoding. Mothers familiarized their 9- to 10-month-olds (N = 35, 17 females, mainly White, data collection: 2018–2019) with objects with or without mutual gaze, infant-directed speech, and calling the infant's name. Ostensive signals
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Developmental trajectories of achievement emotions in mathematics during adolescence Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-09-12 Michiko Sakaki, Kou Murayama, Anne C. Frenzel, Thomas Goetz, Herbert W. Marsh, Stephanie Lichtenfeld, Reinhard Pekrun
This study examined how adolescents' emotions in mathematics develop over time. Growth curve modeling was applied to longitudinal data collected annually from 2002 to 2006 (Grades 5–9; N = 3425 German adolescents; Mage = 11.7, 15.6 years at the first and last waves, respectively; 50.0% female). Results indicated that enjoyment and pride decreased over time (Glass's Δs = −.86, −.71). In contrast, negative
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Seeking versus receiving help: How children integrate suggestions in memory decisions Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-09-08 Diana Selmeczy, Alireza Kazemi, Simona Ghetti
The current research examined how seeking versus receiving help affected children's memory and confidence decisions. Baseline performance, when no help was available, was compared to performance when help could be sought (Experiment 1: N = 83, 41 females) or was provided (Experiment 2: N = 84, 44 females) in a sample of predominately White 5-, 7-, and 9-year-olds from Northern California. Data collection
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Formalizing developmental phenomena as continuous-time systems: Relations between mathematics and language development Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-09-03 Charles C. Driver, Martin J. Tomasik
We demonstrate how developmental theories may be instantiated as statistical models, using hierarchical continuous-time dynamic systems. This approach offers a flexible specification and an often more direct link between theory and model parameters than common modeling frameworks. We address developmental theories of the relation between the academic competencies of mathematics and language, using
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Correction to “Language and reading impairments are associated with increased prevalence of non- right- handedness” Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-28
Abbondanza, F., Dale, P. S., Wang, C. A., Hayiou-Thomas, M. E., Toseeb, U., Koomar, T. S., Wigg, K. G., Feng, Y., Price, K. M., Kerr, E. N., Guger, S. L., Lovett, M. W., Strug, L. J., van Bergen, E., Dolan, C. V., Tomblin, J. B., Moll, K., Schulte-Körne, G., Neuhoff, N., Warnke, A., Fisher, S. E., Barr, C. L., Jacob, J., Michaelson, J. J., Boomsma, D. I., Snowling, M. J., Hulme, C., Whitehouse, A.
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Children and adults' intuitions of what people can believe Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-23 Joshua A. Confer, Hanna Schleihauf, Jan M. Engelmann
Two preregistered studies tested how 5- to 6-year-olds, 7- to 8-year-olds, and adults judged the possibility of holding alternative beliefs (N = 240, 110 females, U.S. sample, mixed ethnicities, data collected from September 2020 through October 2021). In Study 1, children and adults thought people could not hold different beliefs when their initial beliefs were supported by evidence (but judged they
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Associations between a metal mixture and infant negative affectivity: Effect modification by prenatal cortisol and infant sex Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-23 Francheska M. Merced-Nieves, Samuel Eitenbichler, Brandon Goldson, Xueying Zhang, Daniel N. Klein, Michelle Bosquet Enlow, Paul Curtin, Robert O. Wright, Rosalind J. Wright
In-utero exposures interact in complex ways that influence neurodevelopment. Animal research demonstrates that fetal sex moderates the impact of joint exposure to metals and prenatal stress measures, including cortisol, on offspring socioemotional outcomes. Further research is needed in humans. We evaluated the joint association of prenatal exposures to a metal mixture and cortisol with infant negative
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Visual and cognitive processes contribute to age-related improvements in visual selective attention Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-23 Andrew Lynn, John Maule, Dima Amso
Children (N = 103, 4–9 years, 59 females, 84% White, c. 2019) completed visual processing, visual feature integration (color, luminance, motion), and visual search tasks. Contrast sensitivity and feature search improved with age similarly for luminance and color-defined targets. Incidental feature integration improved more with age for color-motion than luminance-motion. Individual differences in feature
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An exploration of the domain specificity of maternal sensitivity among a diverse sample in the infancy period: Unique paths to child outcomes Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-23 Lindsay Taraban, Daniel S. Shaw, Pamela A. Morris, Alan L. Mendelsohn
Maternal sensitivity during an observed mother–child clean-up task at 18 months and maternal sensitivity during an observed mother–child free-play task at 18 months were tested as independent predictors of child internalizing symptoms, externalizing symptoms, social competence, and language development at 24 months. Participants (n = 292 mothers) were recruited between 2015 and 2017, and were low-income
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Configurations of mother–child and father–child attachment relationships as predictors of child language competence: An individual participant data meta-analysis Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-22 Or Dagan, Carlo Schuengel, Marije L. Verhage, Sheri Madigan, Glenn I. Roisman, Kristin Bernard, Robbie Duschinsky, Marian Bakermans-Kranenburg, Jean-François Bureau, Abraham Sagi-Schwartz, Rina D. Eiden, Maria S. Wong, Geoffrey L. Brown, Isabel Soares, Mirjam Oosterman, R. M. Pasco Fearon, Howard Steele, Carla Martins, Ora Aviezer
An individual participant data meta-analysis was conducted to test pre-registered hypotheses about how the configuration of attachment relationships to mothers and fathers predicts children's language competence. Data from seven studies (published between 1985 and 2014) including 719 children (Mage: 19.84 months; 51% female; 87% White) were included in the linear mixed effects analyses. Mean language
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Is Attachment and Biobehavioral Catch-up effective for parents with insecure attachment states of mind? Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-21 Madelyn H. Labella, K. Lee Raby, Stacia V. Bourne, Alec C. Trahan, Danielle Katz, Mary Dozier
Prior research suggests that attachment-based interventions, including Attachment and Biobehavioral Catch-up (ABC), may be less effective at enhancing parenting quality among parents who self-report having an insecure attachment style. The current study tested whether effects of ABC on parental behavior were moderated by categorical and dimensional measures of attachment obtained via Adult Attachment
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Registered Reports in Child Development: Introduction to the Special Section Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-21 Moin Syed, Michael C. Frank, Glenn I. Roisman
Registered Reports (RRs) are an emerging format for publishing empirical journal articles in which the decision to publish an article is based on sound conceptualization, methods, and planned analyses rather than the specific nature of the results. This article introduces the Special Section on Registered Reports in Child Development by describing what RRs are and why they are necessary, outlining
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Preschoolers and adults metonymically extend proper names to owned objects Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-18 Rebecca Zhu, Alison Gopnik
Three preregistered experiments, conducted in 2021, investigated whether English-speaking American preschoolers (N = 120; 4–6 years; 54 females, predominantly White) and adults (N = 80; 18–52 years; 59 females, predominantly Asian) metonymically extend owners' names to owned objects—an extension not typically found in English. In Experiment 1, 5- and 6-year-olds and adults extended names to owned objects
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Priming group identities affects children's resource distribution among groups Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-18 Yara Nassir, Gil Diesendruck
The present research investigated the effect of ethnic–national identity on intergroup attitudes among Israeli children. Between 2019 and 2020, 136 Arab Muslim and 136 Jewish 5- and 10-year-olds (boys and girls) participated in one of four ethnic–national identity conditions: ingroup, outgroup, common identity, and control. In each condition, participants were described a city whose residents were
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Understanding gender inequality in children's reading behavior: New insights from digital behavioral data Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-18 Emil Smith, David Reimer
This study examined gender differences in reading behavior of 2652 Danish 5th-grade students (age 10–12 years, girls 51%, 14% immigrant background) observed for 218 days in 2019/2020, using data from a popular reading app. Reading behavior was operationalized as time spent reading. Analyses of timing of reading behavior and models of day-to-day reading time were employed to investigate the gender gap
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Infection detection in faces: Children's development of pathogen avoidance Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-17 Tiffany S. Leung, Guangyu Zeng, Sarah E. Maylott, Shantalle N. Martinez, Krisztina V. Jakobsen, Elizabeth A. Simpson
This study examined the development of children's avoidance and recognition of sickness using face photos from people with natural, acute, contagious illness. In a U.S. sample of fifty-seven 4- to 5-year-olds (46% male, 70% White), fifty-two 8- to 9-year-olds (26% male, 62% White), and 51 adults (59% male, 61% White), children and adults avoided and recognized sick faces (ds ranged from 0.38 to 2.26)
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Moral reasoning about gang violence in context: A comparative study with children and adolescents exposed to maras in Honduras and not exposed in Nicaragua Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-17 Franklin Moreno
This study examined how youth morally deliberate about conditions of gang violence shaping their communities. Participants (N = 80; 10–11 and 14–15 years; 50% female) exposed to gangs (maras) in Honduras and not exposed to maras in Nicaragua evaluated hypothetical situations of physical harm in contexts of chronic gang violence. Results indicated that mara-exposed youth were more likely to endorse
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Object labeling and disambiguation in 4-month-old infants Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-16 Amanda Saksida, Alan Langus
The account that word learning starts in earnest during the second year of life, when infants have mastered the disambiguation skills, has recently been challenged by evidence that infants during the first year already know many common words. The preliminary ability to rapidly map and disambiguate linguistic labels was tested in Italian-speaking infants (N = 96, 47 boys; age = 4 and 6 months, eye tracking)
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Supporting child and family resilience in the face of political violence: Evidence from a home visit parenting program Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-18 Jane Leer, Florencia Lopez Boo, Savannah Norman
Political violence affects more than 25% of children globally, yet little is known about how to support positive adaptation among conflict-affected children. Using a sample of 3797 Nicaraguan child-caregiver dyads (MAgeTime1 = 1.5 years, MAgeTime2 = 5.9 years; 51% male), this registered report used a novel quasi-experimental approach to examine how exposure to political violence relates to child and
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Reconsidering the failure model: Using a genetically controlled design to assess the spread of problems from reactive aggression to internalizing symptoms through peer rejection across the primary school years Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-16 Sharon Faur, Olivia Valdes, Frank Vitaro, Mara Brendgen, Michel Boivin, Brett Laursen
According to the failure model (Patterson & Capaldi, 1990), peer rejection is the intermediary link between problem behaviors and internalizing symptoms. The present study tested the model with 464 monozygotic and same-sex dizygotic twin pairs (234 female, 230 male dyads). Teacher-reported reactive aggression and internalizing symptoms, and peer-reported peer rejection were collected at ages 6, 7,
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Trajectories of parents' gendered play attitudes during early childhood and implications for children's gender development Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-16 Adam A. Rogers, Jane Shawcroft, Laura A. Stockdale, Sarah M. Coyne, Ashley M. Fraser
This study examined associations between parents' gendered attitudes about play and children's gender development. The sample was 501 families from a large US city followed annually for 4 years (501 mothers, 383 fathers; 69% White, 16% Latinx, 8% African American; children Mage = 5.67 months, 53% boys). Latent trajectories examined change in parents' attitudes toward same- and other-gender play during
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Critical, active, and well adapted: Antecedents and consequences of adolescents' critical consciousness profiles Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-16 Miriam Schwarzenthal, Gülseli Baysu, Matthew Diemer, Linda P. Juang, Maja K. Schachner
This preregistered study aimed to identify antecedents and consequences of adolescents' critical consciousness (CC) profiles with person-centered approaches based on data from 663 ethnically diverse German adolescents collected from 2017 to 2019 (Mage = 12.91, 50% male, 50% female). Latent profile analyses of adolescents' critical reflection and interpersonal and structural critical action intentions
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Learning whom not to trust across early and middle adolescence: A longitudinal neuroimaging study to trusting behavior involving an uncooperative other Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-15 E. Schreuders, M. van Buuren, R. J. Walsh, H. Sijtsma, M. Hollarek, N. C. Lee, L. Krabbendam
Longitudinal changes in trusting behavior across adolescence and their neural correlates were examined. Neural regions of interest (ROIs) included the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC), left anterior insula (AI), bilateral ventral striatum (VS), and right dorsal striatum (DS). Participants (wave 1 age: M = 12.90) played the investor in a Trust Game with an uncooperative
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Who's the winner? Children's math learning in competitive and collaborative scenarios Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-15 Lesenia R. Fish, Lindsey Hildebrand, Nadia Chernyak, Sara Cordes
Games are frequently used to promote math learning, yet the competitive and collaborative contexts introduced by games may exacerbate gender differences. In this study, 1st and 2nd grade children in the U.S. (ages 5–8; N = 274; 70% White, 15% Asian, 2% Black, 1% Native American, 14% mixed or other race; 17% Hispanic) played either a competitive, collaborative, or solo game to learn about a challenging
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Distressing testing: A propensity score analysis of high-stakes exam failure and mental health Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-11 Kathryn Christine Beck, Helene Lie Røhr, Bjørn-Atle Reme, Martin Flatø
This study used rich individual-level registry data covering the entire Norwegian population to identify students aged 17–21 who either failed a high-stakes exit exam or who received the lowest passing grade from 2006 to 2018. Propensity score matching on high-quality observed characteristics was utilized to allow meaningful comparisons (N = 18,052, 64% boys). Results showed a 21% increase in odds
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Can resilience change over time? Patterns and transitions in resilience among young children involved with the child welfare system Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-08 Susan Yoon, Junyeong Yang, Fei Pei, Juan Lorenzo Benavides, Öznur Bayar, Jessica A. Logan, Sherry Hamby
This study examined transitions in resilience profiles and the role of caregiver risk and protective factors in resilience transition probabilities over 18 months among children involved with the child welfare system, using latent profile analysis and latent transition analysis. The sample included 486 children (48% female, baseline Mage = 3.49). There were three resilience profiles at Time 1 (19.9%
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Hands-On: Investigating the role of physical manipulatives in spatial training Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-08-07 Katie A. Gilligan-Lee, Zachary C. K. Hawes, Ashley Y. Williams, Emily K. Farran, Kelly S. Mix
Studies show that spatial interventions lead to improvements in mathematics. However, outcomes vary based on whether physical manipulatives (embodied action) are used during training. This study compares the effects of embodied and non-embodied spatial interventions on spatial and mathematics outcomes. The study has a randomized, controlled, pre-post, follow-up, training design (N = 182; mean age 8 years;
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Development of prosocial behavior and inhibitory control in late childhood: A longitudinal exploration of sex differences and reciprocal relations Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-07-31 Lia Ferschmann, Ingrid Overweg, Fanny Dégeilh, Mona Bekkhus, Alexandra Havdahl, Tilmann von Soest, Christian K. Tamnes
This study examined longitudinal development of prosocial behavior, assessed by the parent-reported Strength and Difficulty Questionnaire, and inhibitory control, measured by the Opposite Worlds Task, in a sample aged 9 and 12 years (n = 9468, 49.9% girls, 85.8% White) from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children. The goal was to assess whether the level of prosocial behavior at age 9 relates
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Charting the longitudinal trajectories and interplay of critical consciousness among youth activists Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-07-28 Andres Pinedo, Michael Frisby, Gabrielle Kubi, Victoria Vezaldenos, Matthew A. Diemer, Sara McAlister, Elise Harris
Critical consciousness (CC) is associated with beneficial developmental outcomes among youth contending with oppression, yet we know little about how CC develops and how the three dimensions of CC (i.e., critical action, critical motivation, and critical reflection) interrelate over time. Therefore, this study employed second-order latent growth modeling to illuminate the longitudinal interplay between
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Towards a general modeling framework of resource competition in cognitive development Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-07-27 Jill de Ron, Marie Deserno, Donald Robinaugh, Denny Borsboom, Han L. J. van der Maas
The current paper presents an integrated formal model of typical and atypical development based on the mechanisms of mutualism and resource competition. The mutualistic network model is extended with the dynamics of competition for limited resources, such as time and environmental factors. The proposed model generates patterns that resemble established phenomena in cognitive development: the positive
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Beyond linearity: Using IRT-scaled level models to describe the relation between prior proportional reasoning skills and fraction learning outcomes Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-07-24 Constanze Schadl, Stefan Ufer
Previous research on the role of prior skills like proportional reasoning skills for the development of mathematical concepts offers conclusions such as “more (prior skills) is better (for later learning).” Insights, which prior skill level goes along with which level of learning outcomes, may advance the understanding of the development of mathematical concepts. An exploratory approach is presented
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Treating children's aggressive behavior problems using cognitive behavior therapy with virtual reality: A multicenter randomized controlled trial Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-07-17 Sophie C. Alsem, Anouk van Dijk, Esmée E. Verhulp, Tycho J. Dekkers, Bram O. De Castro
This multicenter randomized controlled trial investigated whether interactive virtual reality enhanced effectiveness of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) to reduce children's aggressive behavior problems. Boys with aggressive behavior problems (N = 115; Mage = 10.58, SD = 1.48; 95.7% born in Netherlands) were randomized into three groups: CBT with virtual reality, CBT with roleplays, or care-as-usual
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Children's self-evaluation of their prosociality when comparing themselves with a specific versus abstract other Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-07-11 Bar Levy-Friedman, Tehila Kogut
This study examines the development of children's self-assessment of their prosociality in normative social comparisons with an average peer, who was either a concrete individual, or an abstract one, at a school of average socioeconomic level in south Israel (N = 148, Age 6–12 years, 51% females; June 2021). Results show that older children exhibited the better-than-average (BTA) effect by perceiving
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Early home learning support and home mathematics environment as predictors of children's mathematical skills between age 4 and 6: A longitudinal analysis using video observations and survey data Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-07-11 Yiran Vicky Zhao, Jenny Louise Gibson
This large-scale and longitudinal study examines early home support for learning, formal/informal home mathematics activities, and their associations with children's mathematical development between age two and six. Data were collected in Germany between 2012 and 2018, N = 1184 (49% girls, 51% boys), and 15% of children had parents with a migration history. Linguistically and mathematically stimulating
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The state of evidence for social and emotional learning: A contemporary meta-analysis of universal school-based SEL interventions Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-07-13 Christina Cipriano, Michael J. Strambler, Lauren H. Naples, Cheyeon Ha, Megan Kirk, Miranda Wood, Kaveri Sehgal, Almut K. Zieher, Abigail Eveleigh, Michael McCarthy, Melissa Funaro, Annett Ponnock, Jason C. Chow, Joseph Durlak
This article provides a systematic review and meta-analysis of the current evidence for universal school-based (USB) social and emotional learning (SEL) interventions for students in kindergarten through 12th grade available from 2008 through 2020. The sample includes 424 studies from 53 countries, reflecting 252 discrete USB SEL interventions, involving 575,361 students. Results endorsed that, compared
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The role of accuracy in children's judgments of experts' knowledge Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-07-11 Allison J. Williams, Judith H. Danovitch
Across two studies, children ages 6–9 (N = 160, 82 boys, 78 girls; 75% White, 91% non-Hispanic) rated an inaccurate expert's knowledge and provided explanations for the expert's inaccurate statements. In Study 1, children's knowledge ratings decreased as he provided more inaccurate information. Ratings were predicted by age (i.e., older children gave lower ratings than younger children) and how children
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You can't play with us: First-person ostracism affects infants' behavioral reactivity Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-07-10 E. Quadrelli, J. Mermier, S. Nazzari, H. Bulf, C. Turati
Ostracism negatively affects fundamental psychological needs, induces physiological and behavioral changes, and modulates the processing of social information in adults. Yet little is known about children and preverbal infants' responses to first-person experiences of ostracism. The current study aimed to explore the efficacy of a triadic ball-tossing game in manipulating social inclusion and ostracism
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Mechanisms and pathways linking kindergarten behavior problems with mid-life employment earnings for males from low-income neighborhoods Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-07-10 Francis Vergunst, Frank Vitaro, Mara Brendgen, Marie-Pier Larose, Alain Girard, Richard E. Tremblay, Sylvana M. Côté
Childhood behavior problems are associated with reduced labor market participation and lower earnings in adulthood, but little is known about the pathways and mechanisms that explain these associations. Drawing on a 33-year prospective birth cohort of White males from low-income backgrounds (n = 1040), we conducted a path analysis linking participants' teacher-rated behavior problems at age 6 years—that
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Co-development among reading, math, science, and verbal working memory in the elementary stage Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-07-10 Zheng Zhang, Peng Peng
With a focus on within-person effects, this study investigated mutualism among academic skills (reading, math, science) and between those skills and verbal working memory in a general population sample and groups with high or low skills from Grades 2 to 5 (2010–2016, N = 859–9040, age 6.27–13.13 years, 49% female, ethnically diverse). Mutualism was found between reading and science in all high-ability
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Children's judgments on the acceptability of prejudice Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-07-10 Jessica L. Spence, Karri Neldner, Matthew J. Hornsey, Kana Imuta
By middle childhood, children become aware that discriminatory behavior is unacceptable; however, the development of their anti-prejudice sentiments is largely unknown. Across two studies, 333 Australian 5- to 10-year-olds (51% female, majority White) were asked how acceptable they thought it was to have prejudicial sentiments toward 25 different targets. Children responded privately through a novel
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Links between parent–child conversations about emotions and changes in children's emotion knowledge across early childhood Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-07-07 Peter J. Reschke, Brandon N. Clifford, Mindy Brown, Matthew Siufanua, Haley Graver, Alexandra M. Cooper, Chris L. Porter, Laura A. Stockdale, Sarah M. Coyne
This study examined different sources of emotion socialization. Children (N = 256, 115 girls, 129 boys, 12 child gender not reported) and parents (62% White, 9% Black, 19% Hispanic, 3% Asian American, and 7% “Other”) were recruited from Denver, Colorado. In waves 1 (Mage = 2.45 years, SD = 0.26) and 2 (Mage = 3.51 years, SD = 0.26), parents and children discussed wordless images of children experiencing
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Exploring academic and cognitive skills impacting retention and acquisition of word-problem knowledge gained during or after intervention Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-07-07 Xin Lin, Sarah R. Powell
In the present study, we investigated the impact of a word-problem intervention in retention and acquisition of knowledge after the intervention ended. We based analyses upon Grade 4 students experiencing mathematics difficulty (average age at pretest = 8.77) who received one of two variants of a word-problem intervention (with [n = 111] vs. without [n = 110] embedded pre-algebraic reasoning instruction)
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Developmental patterns of children's shyness: Relations with physiological, emotional, and regulatory responses to being treated unfairly Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-07-07 Raha Hassan, Cynthia L. Smith, Louis A. Schmidt, Christina A. Brook, Martha Ann Bell
The dysregulation of social fear has been widely studied in children's shyness, but we know little about how shy children regulate during unfair treatment. We first characterized developmental patterns of children's shyness (N = 304, ngirls = 153; 74% White, 26% Other) across 2 (Mage = 2.07), 3 (Mage = 3.08), 4 (Mage = 4.08), and 6 (Mage = 6.58) years of age. Data collection occurred from 2007 to 2014
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Attention to novelty interferes with toddlers' emerging memory decision-making Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-07-06 Sarah Leckey, Shefali Bhagath, Elliott G. Johnson, Simona Ghetti
Memory decision-making in 26- to 32-month-olds was investigated using visual-paired comparison paradigms, requiring toddlers to select familiar stimuli (Active condition) or view familiar and novel stimuli (Passive condition). In Experiment 1 (N = 108, 54.6% female, 62% White; replication N = 98), toddlers with higher accuracy in the Active condition showed reduced novelty preference in that condition
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Vicarious severe school discipline predicts racial disparities among non-disciplined Black and White American adolescents Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-06-29 Juan Del Toro, Ming-Te Wang
Racial disparities in school discipline may have collateral consequences on the larger non-suspended student population. The present study leveraged two longitudinal datasets with 1201 non-suspended adolescents (48% Black, 52% White; 55% females, 45% males; Mage: 12–13) enrolled in 84 classrooms in an urban mid-Atlantic city of the United States during the 2016–2017 and 2017–2018 academic years. Classmates'
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Mitigating invalid and mischievous survey responses: A registered report examining risk disparities between heterosexual and lesbian, gay, bisexual, or questioning youth Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-06-26 Joseph R. Cimpian, Jennifer D. Timmer, Taek H. Kim
In a Registered Report, the authors propose a new survey-bias-mitigation method—incorporating inverse probability weighting via boosted regression—to better understand lesbian, gay, bisexual, or questioning (LGBQ)-heterosexual youth risk disparities. This method is tested using the 2019 US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-collected Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS) national data, which contain
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Children can represent complex social status hierarchies: Evidence from Indonesia Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-06-25 Jamie Amemiya, Kiara Widjanarko, Irene Chung, Lin Bian, Gail D. Heyman
Children's ethnicity-status associations are often studied in societies where one ethnic group possesses status across multiple dimensions, such as political influence and wealth. This study examined children's (6–12 years) and adults' representations of more complex hierarchies in Indonesia (N = 341; 38% Native Indonesian, 33% Chinese Indonesian, and 27% other ethnicities; 55% female, 36% male; 2021–2022)
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Development of teaching in ni-Vanuatu children Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-06-14 Eva Brandl, Emily H. Emmott, Ruth Mace
Teaching is an important mechanism of social learning. In industrialized societies, 3-year-olds tend to teach through demonstrations and short commands, while 5-year-olds use more verbal communication and abstract explanations. However, it remains unclear whether this generalizes to other cultures. This study presents results from a peer teaching game with 55 Melanesian children (4.7–11.4 years, 24
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Intergroup resource allocation among children from minority and majority groups in three settings of former conflict Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-06-14 B. Corbett, J. Dautel, J. Tomašić Humer, A. Tomovska Misoska, L. K. Taylor
Intergroup resource allocation was examined among 333 children aged 7–11 (51.9% female) within three settings of former intergroup conflict (January–June 2021). Children represented both ethno-religious minority and majority groups (Republic of North Macedonia: Albanians, Macedonians; Croatia: Serbs, Croats; Northern Ireland: Catholics, Protestants), from predominantly White and middle-class families
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Environmental inequality and disparities in school readiness: The role of neurotoxic lead Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-06-12 Jared N. Schachner, Geoffrey T. Wodtke
Developmental science has increasingly scrutinized how environmental hazards influence child outcomes, but few studies examine how contaminants affect disparities in early skill formation. Linking research on environmental inequality and early childhood development, this study assessed whether differences in exposure to neurotoxic lead explain sociodemographic gaps in school readiness. Using panel
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Cheating and the effect of promises in Indian and German children Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-06-12 Patricia Kanngiesser, Jahnavi Sunderarajan, Jan K. Woike
Cheating is harmful to others and society at large. Promises have been shown to increase honesty in children, but their effectiveness has not been compared between different cultural contexts. In a study (2019) with 7- to 12-year-olds (N = 406, 48% female, middle-class), voluntary promises reduced cheating in Indian, but not in German children. Children in both contexts cheated, but cheating rates
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Infant-directed speech does not always involve exaggerated vowel distinctions: Evidence from Danish Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-06-12 Christopher Cox, Christina Dideriksen, Tamar Keren-Portnoy, Andreas Roepstorff, Morten H. Christiansen, Riccardo Fusaroli
This study compared the acoustic properties of 26 (100% female, 100% monolingual) Danish caregivers' spontaneous speech addressed to their 11- to 24-month-old infants (infant-directed speech, IDS) and an adult experimenter (adult-directed speech, ADS). The data were collected between 2016 and 2018 in Aarhus, Denmark. Prosodic properties of Danish IDS conformed to cross-linguistic patterns, with a higher
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How do socioeconomic attainment gaps in early mathematical ability arise? Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-05-30 Ella James-Brabham, Toni Loveridge, Francesco Sella, Paul Wakeling, Daniel J. Carroll, Emma Blakey
Socioeconomic attainment gaps in mathematical ability are evident before children begin school, and widen over time. Little is known about why early attainment gaps emerge. Two cross-sectional correlational studies were conducted in 2018–2019 with socioeconomically diverse preschoolers, to explore four factors that might explain why attainment gaps arise: working memory, inhibitory control, verbal
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White children's prosocial behavior toward White versus Black peers: The role of children's effortful control and parents' implicit racial attitudes Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-05-23 Xiaoye Xu, Tracy L. Spinrad, Sonya Xinyue Xiao, Jingyi Xu, Nancy Eisenberg, Deborah J. Laible, Rebecca H. Berger, Gustavo Carlo
White children's effortful control (EC), parents' implicit racial attitudes, and their interaction were examined as predictors of children's prosocial behavior toward White versus Black recipients. Data were collected from 171 White children (55% male, Mage = 7.13 years, SD = 0.92) and their parent in 2017. Prosocial behavior toward White peers was predicted by children's higher EC. When predicting
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Counterfactual choices and moral judgments in children Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-05-25 Shalini Gautam, Ruby Owen Hall, Thomas Suddendorf, Jonathan Redshaw
When making moral judgments of past actions, adults often think counterfactually about what could have been done differently. Considerable evidence suggests that counterfactual thinking emerges around age 6, but it remains unknown how this development influences children's moral judgments. Across two studies, Australian children aged 4–9 (N = 236, 142 Females) were told stories about two characters
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Adolescent caregiving success as a predictor of social functioning from ages 13 to 33 Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-05-17 Joseph P. Allen, Meghan A. Costello, Amanda F. Hellwig, Corey Pettit, Jessica A. Stern, Bert N. Uchino
Adolescent success providing satisfying support in response to a close friend's call in a caregiving task was examined as a potentially fundamental developmental competence likely to predict future social functioning, adult caregiving security, and physical health. Adolescents (86 males, 98 females; 58% White, 29% African American, 8% mixed race/ethnicity, 5% other) were followed from ages 13 to 33
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Efficacy of a cultural adaptation of the Identity Project intervention among adolescents attending multiethnic classrooms in Italy: A randomized controlled trial Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-05-17 Chiara Ceccon, Maja K. Schachner, Francesca Lionetti, Massimiliano Pastore, Adriana J. Umaña-Taylor, Ughetta Moscardino
This registered report evaluated the efficacy of an Italian adaptation of the Identity Project, a school-based intervention promoting adolescents' cultural identity. Migration background and environmental sensitivity were explored as moderators. After adapting and piloting the intervention, a randomized controlled trial was conducted between October 2021 and January 2022 on 747 ethnically diverse adolescents
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Family and peer ethnic-racial socialization in adolescents' everyday life: A daily transactional model with ethnic-racial identity and discrimination Child Dev. (IF 5.661) Pub Date : 2023-05-14 Yijie Wang, Youchuan Zhang, Hannah Wadsworth
There is limited research on ethnic-racial socialization outside the family context (e.g., in peer groups). Using two-week, daily data from 177 U.S. ethnic-racial minority 9th graders in 2017–2020 (Mage = 14.48 years old; 51% females; 52% Black, 20% Latinx, 10% Asian American, 6% Native American, and 12% Other), this study tested a transactional model of family and peer ethnic-racial socialization