The overall objective of this research is to trace the course of individual differences in adaptation throughout childhood. The present research will extend longitudinal assessments of 190 children and their families through the middle childhood years. Assessments of these subjects began during the third trimester of pregnancy and continued through infancy, the toddler and preschool years and into early elementary school. Available data are extensive, including prenatal and newborn variables, early interaction, ongoing family circumstances, cognitive development, socioemotional development, and temperament. The specific focus of the present research concerns social relationships and social competence in middle childhood. Peer relationships, sibling relationships, and child-teacher relationships, as well as parent-child relationships, will be assessed. In addition to examining relations among these domains of social functioning and various contemporary correlates (family life stress, parental relationship stability, etc.), antecedents of individual differences in social functioning will be explored. The role of early parent-child relationships, child temperament, cognitive variables, etc., can be examined singly or in combination as they forecast particular features of relationships with peers and others. Thus, in addition to advancing the science of social relationships with peers in middle childhood, the present research will provide important data on the nature and origins of individual differences in social competence with peers and others in the school age child's social world. It is known that the adequacy, or inadequacy, of such relationships strongly predicts adult adjustment and psychopathology. A comprehensive understanding of such individual differences, including their origins, may be a key to efforts at primary prevention. A broad spectrum of methods and analytic procedures, all previously developed in earlier phases of this research, will be used. In brief, multiple data sources (teachers, peers, parents, observers and subjects) and multiple data generating techniques (ratings, Q-sorts, interviews, coded observations) are used. Validity is established through a convergence of sources and methods.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01MH040864-03
Application #
3379392
Study Section
(LCRA)
Project Start
1986-04-01
Project End
1991-03-31
Budget Start
1988-04-01
Budget End
1989-03-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
1988
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Minnesota Twin Cities
Department
Type
Schools of Education
DUNS #
168559177
City
Minneapolis
State
MN
Country
United States
Zip Code
55455
Narayan, Angela J; Labella, Madelyn H; Englund, Michelle M et al. (2017) The legacy of early childhood violence exposure to adulthood intimate partner violence: Variable- and person-oriented evidence. J Fam Psychol 31:833-843
Bosquet Enlow, Michelle; Englund, Michelle M; Egeland, Byron (2016) Maternal Childhood Maltreatment History and Child Mental Health: Mechanisms in Intergenerational Effects. J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol :1-16
Meuwissen, Alyssa S; Englund, Michelle M (2016) Executive Function in At-Risk Children: Importance of Father-Figure Support and Mother Parenting. J Appl Dev Psychol 44:72-80
Bosquet Enlow, Michelle; Egeland, Byron; Carlson, Elizabeth et al. (2014) Mother-infant attachment and the intergenerational transmission of posttraumatic stress disorder. Dev Psychopathol 26:41-65
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Narayan, Angela J; Englund, Michelle M; Carlson, Elizabeth A et al. (2014) Adolescent conflict as a developmental process in the prospective pathway from exposure to interparental violence to dating violence. J Abnorm Child Psychol 42:239-50
Narayan, Angela J; Englund, Michelle M; Egeland, Byron (2013) Developmental timing and continuity of exposure to interparental violence and externalizing behavior as prospective predictors of dating violence. Dev Psychopathol 25:973-90
Englund, Michelle M; Siebenbruner, Jessica; Oliva, Elizabeth M et al. (2013) The developmental significance of late adolescent substance use for early adult functioning. Dev Psychol 49:1554-64
Salvatore, Jessica E; Haydon, Katherine C; Simpson, Jeffry A et al. (2013) The distinctive role of romantic relationships in moderating the effects of early caregiving on adult anxious-depressed symptoms over 9 years. Dev Psychopathol 25:843-56
Raby, K Lee; Cicchetti, Dante; Carlson, Elizabeth A et al. (2013) Genetic contributions to continuity and change in attachment security: a prospective, longitudinal investigation from infancy to young adulthood. J Child Psychol Psychiatry 54:1223-30

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