Dissociative behaviors and their relation to both the self and self-organization were examined
using the developmental psychopathology perspective in a prospective longitudinal study of
high-risk children. Participants were 168 young adults (n = 79 females, n =
89 males, age = 18–19 years) considered high-risk for poor developmental outcomes at
birth due to poverty. The present study investigated whether trauma, sense of self, quality of early
mother–child relationship, temperament, and intelligence were related to dissociative
symptomatology measured at four times across 19 years. Findings were (a) age of onset,
chronicity and severity of trauma were highly correlated and predicted level of dissociation; (b)
both the avoidant and disorganized patterns of attachment were strong predictors of dissociation;
(c) dissociation in childhood may be a more normative response to disruption and stress, while
dissociation in adolescence and young adulthood may be more indicative of psychopathology; (d)
preliminary support was found for a model proposed by G. Liotti that links disorganized
attachment, later trauma, and dissociation in adulthood; and (e) strong support was found for N.
Waller, F. W. Putnam, and E. B. Carlson's contention that psychopathological dissociation
should not be viewed as the top end of a continuum of dissociative symptomatology, but as a
separate taxon that represents an extreme deviation from normal development.
This study examined predictions from preschool parenting measures to middle childhood cognitive and socioemotional child outcomes to explore whether parenting assessment methodologies that require more time, training, and expense yield better predictions of child outcomes than less intensive methodologies. Mother-child dyads (N = 278) in low-income African American families were assessed when the child was in preschool, using maternal report, the Home Observation for Measurement of the Environment-Short Form (P. Baker & F. Mott, 1989; R. Bradley & B. Caldwell, 1984), and structured observational measures of parenting. Child outcomes reported by children, mothers, teachers, and direct assessment were collected 4 years later. All parenting methodologies showed some predictive value; however, observational parenting measures showed the strongest and most consistent predictions of child outcomes.
Disagreements between school-aged children were examined as a function of friendship status. 66 same-sex dyads were selected, including equal numbers of "best friends" and nonfriends, who were then observed while playing a board game (a closed-field situation). Conflicts occurred more frequently among friends than among nonfriends and lasted longer. Friends did not talk more during their conflicts than nonfriends, but assertions were used selectively according to friendship and sex: With friends, girls used assertions accompanied by rationales more frequently than boys whereas boys used assertions without rationales more frequently than girls. These sex differences were not evident during conflicts between nonfriends. Results are discussed in relation to the social constraints intrinsic to closed-field competitive conditions as they apply to friendship relations in middle childhood.
This study examined predictability of observed parent-child interaction from preschool to middle childhood in 283 mother-child dyads. Participants were welfare recipients enrolled in the Observational Study of the Job Opportunities and Basic Skills Training Program. Structured observational sessions were conducted both at preschool age and middle childhood, and were coded for maternal social behavior, child social behavior, and dyadic interaction. Analyses explored direct relations between the assessments; relations between the assessments with possible third-variable influences, such as maternal literacy, covaried out; and moderated relations. Results indicated that observed mother-child interaction in middle childhood could be significantly predicted from observed interaction 4 years earlier. Risk status moderated the relations such that those families with greater risk factors tended to show more stability, although this stability was, at times, through maintaining suboptimal functioning.
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