Testing Thornberry`s interactional theory: the reciprocal relations
... social control and social learning variables. They did not fully cover the transition throughout adolescence. They also did not adequately examine the variation of social category and individual criminal propensity. This study selects family attachment as social control and deviant peer association ...
... social control and social learning variables. They did not fully cover the transition throughout adolescence. They also did not adequately examine the variation of social category and individual criminal propensity. This study selects family attachment as social control and deviant peer association ...
Do addicts use substances to
... same category as a heroin or 2crack cocaine user with regard to their functioning in relationships may not be useful depending on the duration of their drug use. The properties of cocaine; a stimulant drug are often reported as enhancing performance in relationships specifically intimate encounters, ...
... same category as a heroin or 2crack cocaine user with regard to their functioning in relationships may not be useful depending on the duration of their drug use. The properties of cocaine; a stimulant drug are often reported as enhancing performance in relationships specifically intimate encounters, ...
Trauma: Its Effects on Children and Adolescents
... May believe they are going crazy Embarrassment Isolation and feeling different Grief may be easier to understand than PTSD Repetitive thoughts about death and dying Revenge fantasies that can be acted out Avoidance or social withdrawal ...
... May believe they are going crazy Embarrassment Isolation and feeling different Grief may be easier to understand than PTSD Repetitive thoughts about death and dying Revenge fantasies that can be acted out Avoidance or social withdrawal ...
Contributions of attachment theory and research: A framework for
... Attachment theory has been generating creative and impactful research for almost half a century. In this article we focus on the documented antecedents and consequences of individual differences in infant attachment patterns, suggesting topics for further theoretical clarification, research, clinica ...
... Attachment theory has been generating creative and impactful research for almost half a century. In this article we focus on the documented antecedents and consequences of individual differences in infant attachment patterns, suggesting topics for further theoretical clarification, research, clinica ...
Symposium 1A: Amae and Attachment Representations in Children
... the construction of Internal Working Models (IWMs) of attachment, which will late guide the individual’s expectations and behaviors in close relationships, all along his or her life. The qualitative, individual characteristics of these models reflect the specificity of the individual’s early experie ...
... the construction of Internal Working Models (IWMs) of attachment, which will late guide the individual’s expectations and behaviors in close relationships, all along his or her life. The qualitative, individual characteristics of these models reflect the specificity of the individual’s early experie ...
Anxiety: Friend or Foe? Part 3 – Anxiety in Modern Life
... Temperament – there are nine characteristics of temperament that we are born with, one of which is level of reactivity. This basically means that our nervous systems may be “wired” to be sensitive to our environment, or not. If sensitive, we may react to stimulation with alarm. If not sensitive, we ...
... Temperament – there are nine characteristics of temperament that we are born with, one of which is level of reactivity. This basically means that our nervous systems may be “wired” to be sensitive to our environment, or not. If sensitive, we may react to stimulation with alarm. If not sensitive, we ...
Chapter 10 Editable Lecture Notecards
... One of Bowlby’s colleagues, Mary Ainsworth, eventually showed that attachments vary in character. Ainsworth developed a method called the strange situation procedure to assess the quality of attachment between 1-2-year-old infants and their caregivers. The strange situation procedure puts infants th ...
... One of Bowlby’s colleagues, Mary Ainsworth, eventually showed that attachments vary in character. Ainsworth developed a method called the strange situation procedure to assess the quality of attachment between 1-2-year-old infants and their caregivers. The strange situation procedure puts infants th ...
Attachment as a Mediator of Eating Disorder
... adulthood (Ainsworth, 1969; Main, 2000). Secure attachment in the early years provides a child with the stable base needed to confidently explore the environment, to develop a feeling of empathy for others, to have positive self-esteem and subsequently, to have better adult affectional and love rela ...
... adulthood (Ainsworth, 1969; Main, 2000). Secure attachment in the early years provides a child with the stable base needed to confidently explore the environment, to develop a feeling of empathy for others, to have positive self-esteem and subsequently, to have better adult affectional and love rela ...
Traumatology, Vol. 8, No. 3 (September 2002)
... worldview are important developmental tasks. Young people seek for their own identity and psychosocial resources outside the family. They typically show a strong belief in their own invulnerability and capability to abolish injustice and to change the world. Their abstract thinking is increasingly s ...
... worldview are important developmental tasks. Young people seek for their own identity and psychosocial resources outside the family. They typically show a strong belief in their own invulnerability and capability to abolish injustice and to change the world. Their abstract thinking is increasingly s ...
Borderline Personality Disorder
... Ranges of modalities adopted by psychiatrists: Formal psychoanalysis, psychoanalytic psychotherapy, psychodynamic psychotherapy, insight-oriented psychotherapy, psychodynamicallyinformed psychiatric management Conflicts with the era of managed care, health insurance funds, evidence based medicine, h ...
... Ranges of modalities adopted by psychiatrists: Formal psychoanalysis, psychoanalytic psychotherapy, psychodynamic psychotherapy, insight-oriented psychotherapy, psychodynamicallyinformed psychiatric management Conflicts with the era of managed care, health insurance funds, evidence based medicine, h ...
Chapter 4
... other people’s behavior may be influenced by beliefs, desires, and emotions that differ from one’s own • Temperament: An individual’s characteristic manner of behavior or reaction (strong biological origin) – What’s your temperament? ...
... other people’s behavior may be influenced by beliefs, desires, and emotions that differ from one’s own • Temperament: An individual’s characteristic manner of behavior or reaction (strong biological origin) – What’s your temperament? ...
Problems in Adolescence
... Schools are not meeting the needs of adolescents Impersonal, no counseling available Low SES High SES – male substance abuse ...
... Schools are not meeting the needs of adolescents Impersonal, no counseling available Low SES High SES – male substance abuse ...
Cognitive Development
... Socio-cultural Development Self-awareness At about 15 months of age, infants are able to recognise themselves in a mirror which demonstrates self-awareness. Social awareness: Around the same time as infants become self-aware, they also become aware of others. They use this awareness to learn and gui ...
... Socio-cultural Development Self-awareness At about 15 months of age, infants are able to recognise themselves in a mirror which demonstrates self-awareness. Social awareness: Around the same time as infants become self-aware, they also become aware of others. They use this awareness to learn and gui ...
attachment theory and adult learning
... Bowlby envisaged the role of the therapist as providing a secure base from which a patient could explore their representational models of themselves and their attachment figures with a view to reappraising them in the light of the new understandings one may reach in therapy (Bowlby 1988, p.138). The ...
... Bowlby envisaged the role of the therapist as providing a secure base from which a patient could explore their representational models of themselves and their attachment figures with a view to reappraising them in the light of the new understandings one may reach in therapy (Bowlby 1988, p.138). The ...
WELCOME STUDENTS
... * it’s the reinforcer’s fault not the person’s.. In other words people are not basically good or bad (they easily change if we change the reinforcers) * to extinguish “bad” behavior be consistent. Never give in • to cement “good” behavior in you need to fail (but only sometimes) • Pay attention to p ...
... * it’s the reinforcer’s fault not the person’s.. In other words people are not basically good or bad (they easily change if we change the reinforcers) * to extinguish “bad” behavior be consistent. Never give in • to cement “good” behavior in you need to fail (but only sometimes) • Pay attention to p ...
Developmental Psy
... The developmental level of a growing individual depends on the integrity of the CNS and on environmental and psychological factors. The importance of environmental stimulation for child development has been appreciated since research on children in institutions showed that development was severely a ...
... The developmental level of a growing individual depends on the integrity of the CNS and on environmental and psychological factors. The importance of environmental stimulation for child development has been appreciated since research on children in institutions showed that development was severely a ...
Name: Date: ______ 1. A mother who is slow in responding to her
... communal societies are less likely to develop ________ morality. A) preconventional B) postconventional C) concrete operational D) conventional E) preoperational ...
... communal societies are less likely to develop ________ morality. A) preconventional B) postconventional C) concrete operational D) conventional E) preoperational ...
Developmental Psychology
... Placed in a strange situation, 70% show secure attachment. They explore their environment happily in the presence of their mothers but distressed when mom leaves. The other 30% show insecure attachment. These children cling to their mothers or caregivers and are less likely to explore the environmen ...
... Placed in a strange situation, 70% show secure attachment. They explore their environment happily in the presence of their mothers but distressed when mom leaves. The other 30% show insecure attachment. These children cling to their mothers or caregivers and are less likely to explore the environmen ...
CARFLEOPCarney
... Quick tour..... Bipolar Disorder What Distinguishes Bipolar Disorder from A.D.H.D. and O.D.D.? While hyperactivity may exist in all three conditions, intense mood swings are more indicative of manic-depressive syndromes. Bipolar children seem to be in a chronic state of alternation between abnormal ...
... Quick tour..... Bipolar Disorder What Distinguishes Bipolar Disorder from A.D.H.D. and O.D.D.? While hyperactivity may exist in all three conditions, intense mood swings are more indicative of manic-depressive syndromes. Bipolar children seem to be in a chronic state of alternation between abnormal ...
Chapter 4
... Secure: infant distressed when mother leaves but easily comforted when she returns Ambivalent: infant is distressed when mother leaves but sends mixed signals upon return Avoidant: not distressed when mother leaves and upon return, avoids reuniting with mother ...
... Secure: infant distressed when mother leaves but easily comforted when she returns Ambivalent: infant is distressed when mother leaves but sends mixed signals upon return Avoidant: not distressed when mother leaves and upon return, avoids reuniting with mother ...
Healthy Families America and Preventing Bullying
... experiences. Like all learning, the acquisition of empathy is a developmental process and begins in the home. Over time, our ability to interpret and respond meaningfully to the feelings of others is dependent on effective modeling of responsive care from parents. Can parents with histories of trau ...
... experiences. Like all learning, the acquisition of empathy is a developmental process and begins in the home. Over time, our ability to interpret and respond meaningfully to the feelings of others is dependent on effective modeling of responsive care from parents. Can parents with histories of trau ...
Social Development - Northern Highlands
... dynamics of relationships Marital satisfaction often declines after birth of child ...
... dynamics of relationships Marital satisfaction often declines after birth of child ...
Introducing parents to attachment theory
... may come to feel unlovable and behave with others in a way that anticipates the same response from them. As with any theory, ideas about Attachment Theory have grown and developed. In the ‘60s and ‘70s, Mary Ainsworth expanded upon Bowlby’s initial concepts, and formulated three categories of attach ...
... may come to feel unlovable and behave with others in a way that anticipates the same response from them. As with any theory, ideas about Attachment Theory have grown and developed. In the ‘60s and ‘70s, Mary Ainsworth expanded upon Bowlby’s initial concepts, and formulated three categories of attach ...