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1. Infant Brain Structures, Executive Function, and Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Problems at Preschool Age. A Prospective Study (EJ997029)

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Author(s):

Ghassabian, AkhgarHerba, Catherine M.Roza, Sabine J.Govaert, PaulSchenk, Jacqueline J.Jaddoe, Vincent W.Hofman, AlbertWhite, TonyaVerhulst, Frank C.Tiemeier, Henning

Source:

Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, v54 n1 p96-104 Jan 2013

Pub Date:

2013-01-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Brain Hemisphere FunctionsAttention Deficit Hyperactivity DisorderChild BehaviorBrainNeurologyInhibitionExecutive FunctionInfantsCheck ListsShort Term MemoryDiagnostic TestsCorrelationYoung ChildrenCognitive ProcessesEmotional ResponsePlanningAge DifferencesPredictor VariablesForeign Countries

Abstract:
Background: Neuroimaging findings have provided evidence for a relation between variations in brain structures and Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). However, longitudinal neuroimaging studies are typically confined to children who have already been diagnosed with ADHD. In a population-based study, we aimed to characterize the prospective association between brain structures measure Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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2. Brain Structure Abnormalities in Adolescent Girls with Conduct Disorder (EJ997027)

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Author(s):

Fairchild, GraemeHagan, Cindy C.Walsh, Nicholas D.Passamonti, LucaCalder, Andrew J.Goodyer, Ian M.

Source:

Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, v54 n1 p86-95 Jan 2013

Pub Date:

2013-01-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
IdentificationPregnancyAdolescentsBrain Hemisphere FunctionsEmpathyFemalesBehavior DisordersCorrelationEarly ParenthoodPersonality ProblemsAntisocial BehaviorDiagnostic TestsNeurologyControl GroupsAggressionEmotional ResponseRewardsCognitive Processes

Abstract:
Background: Conduct disorder (CD) in female adolescents is associated with a range of negative outcomes, including teenage pregnancy and antisocial personality disorder. Although recent studies have documented changes in brain structure and function in male adolescents with CD, there have been no neuroimaging studies of female adolescents with CD. Our primary objective was to investigate whether Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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3. Regulation of Emotions in Socially Challenging Learning Situations: An Instrument to Measure the Adaptive and Social Nature of the Regulation Process (EJ996582)

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Author(s):

Jarvenoja, HannaVolet, SimoneJarvela, Sanna

Source:

Educational Psychology, v33 n1 p31-58 2013

Pub Date:

2013-00-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Descriptive

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Learning StrategiesLearning TheoriesMetacognitionMeasures (Individuals)Self ControlCooperative LearningGoal OrientationReliabilityEmotional ResponseLearning Motivation

Abstract:
Self-regulated learning (SRL) research has conventionally relied on measures, which treat SRL as an aptitude. To study self-regulation and motivation in learning contexts as an ongoing adaptive process, situation-specific methods are needed in addition to static measures. This article presents an "Adaptive Instrument for Regulation of Emotions" aimed at accessing students' experiences of individu Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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4. Impact Evaluation of a School-Based Counselling Intervention in Northern Ireland: Is It Effective for Pupils Who Have Been Bullied? (EJ996285)

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Author(s):

McElearney, AislingAdamson, GaryShevlin, MarkBunting, Brendan

Source:

Child Care in Practice, v19 n1 p4-22 2013

Pub Date:

2013-00-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Outcome MeasuresInterventionWell BeingBullyingForeign CountriesCounseling EffectivenessOutcomes of TreatmentProgram EvaluationLongitudinal StudiesScoresPeer RelationshipComparative AnalysisEmotional Response

Abstract:
Bullying remains a significant issue in the lives of many children and young people at school and can have serious negative implications for emotional health and well-being in the short and longer term. This paper reports on an impact evaluation of the effectiveness of a school counselling intervention in promoting positive change in the peer relationships of pupils who have been bullied. Longitu Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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5. Cycles of Fear: A Model of Lesbian and Gay Educational Leaders' Lived Experiences (EJ995851)

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Author(s):

deLeon, Mary J.Brunner, C. Cryss

Source:

Educational Administration Quarterly, v49 n1 p161-203 Feb 2013

Pub Date:

2013-02-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
HomosexualityPhenomenologyFocus GroupsSocial AttitudesSocial BehaviorSocial TheoriesHermeneuticsEducational AdministrationAdministratorsInterviewsFearSocial BiasAdministrator EducationPolicy FormationAnxietyEmotional Response

Abstract:
Purpose: The article's purpose is to highlight a national qualitative study that generated a model for understanding how society's actions and attitudes affect and inform the lived experiences of lesbian/gay (LG) educational leaders. Research Methods/Approach: Three bodies of literature informed the methods of the study: queer legal theory, critical phenomenology, and poststructural hermeneutics. Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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6. "Their Experience Is the Immigrant Experience": Ellis Island, Documentary Film, and Rhetorically Reversible Whiteness (EJ995117)

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Author(s):

Irwin, Meryl J.

Source:

Quarterly Journal of Speech, v99 n1 p74-97 2013

Pub Date:

2013-00-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Evaluative

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
ImmigrantsDocumentariesImmigrationWhitesRacial DifferencesSocial AttitudesRhetoricAffective BehaviorEmotional ResponseCivil RightsIdentification (Psychology)Social Bias

Abstract:
Political advocates on the ideological right have long taken seriously what their counterparts on the left have not: white racialized affect. As left activists and scholars have alternately lamented and raged over the steady creep of the "middle" to the "right," they have documented in detail the outcomes of whites' refusal to engage in "genuine" racial atonement. I argue in this essay that there Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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7. Socializing Infants toward a Cultural Understanding of Expressing Negative Affect: A Bakhtinian Informed Discursive Psychology Approach (EJ995090)

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Author(s):

Demuth, Carolin

Source:

Mind, Culture, and Activity, v20 n1 p39-61 2013

Pub Date:

2013-00-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Middle ClassCultural DifferencesCross Cultural StudiesInfantsCaregiversMothersSocializationEmotional ResponseSociocultural PatternsParent Child RelationshipForeign CountriesDiscourse AnalysisCultural ContextSocial EnvironmentAgricultural Occupations

Abstract:
This article addresses the socialization of emotion expression in infancy. It argues that in order to adequately understand emotion development we need to consider the appraisal of emotion expression through caregivers in mundane, everyday interactions. Drawing on sociocultural and Bakhtinian theorizing, it claims that caregivers' appraisals of infants' emotion expression are dialogically intertw Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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8. Cry, Baby, Cry: A Dialogic Response to Emotion (EJ995089)

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Author(s):

White, E. Jayne

Source:

Mind, Culture, and Activity, v20 n1 p62-78 2013

Pub Date:

2013-00-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Descriptive

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Video TechnologyInfantsToddlersMathematics EducationEmotional ResponseSocial BehaviorPhilosophySchemata (Cognition)InteractionForeign CountriesInfant Behavior

Abstract:
This article challenges traditional approaches to emotion as a discreet biological or dialectic process in the early years. In doing so the proposition is made that emotion is an answerable social act of meaning-making and self-hood. Inspired by Bakhtinian philosophy, which resists separating emotion from cognition or the individual from their social milieu, the dialogic interplay that takes plac Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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9. How Do Emotions Signify? Social Relations and Psychological Functions in the Dramatic Constitution of Subjects (EJ995088)

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Author(s):

Magiolino, Lavinia Lopes SalomaoSmolka, Ana Luiza Bustamante

Source:

Mind, Culture, and Activity, v20 n1 p96-112 2013

Pub Date:

2013-00-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Descriptive

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
PsychologyEmotional ResponseCorrelationSemioticsRoleVerbal CommunicationSelf ControlGeneralizationPersonalityLanguage PlanningCommunication (Thought Transfer)Interpersonal Relationship

Abstract:
In this article, we discuss contributions from contemporary authors toward understanding a complex topic: human emotions. We comment on these authors' ideas and describe their ways of talking about emotions in relation to language, consciousness, meaning, and psychological instruments. After considering the distinct contributions of these authors, we inquire how Vygotsky's ideas deepen our unders Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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10. Recognizing and Managing Countertransference in the College Classroom: An Exploration of Expert Teachers' Inner Experiences (EJ994816)

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Author(s):

Slater, RachelVeach, Patricia McCarthyLi, Ziqiu

Source:

Innovative Higher Education, v38 n1 p3-17 Feb 2013

Pub Date:

2013-02-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Emotional ResponseEmotional ExperienceTeacher Student RelationshipExperienced TeachersCollege FacultyBehavior ProblemsStudent BehaviorCollege StudentsPsychological PatternsIdentification (Psychology)Self Management

Abstract:
Teacher countertransference refers to conscious and unconscious, negative or positive emotional reactions to certain students that arise from the teacher's own areas of personal conflict. Our investigation of 14 expert teachers' countertransference experiences in the college classroom, yielded several themes. Countertransference triggers included challenging behaviors (e.g., student disengagement Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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