| Keyword search (4,164 papers available) | ![]() |
"De France K" Authored Publications:
| Title | Authors | PubMed ID | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | An intensive longitudinal investigation of maternal and infant touching patterns across context and throughout the first 9-months of life | Mercuri M; Stack DM; De France K; Jean ADL; Fogel A; | 37337452 CRDH |
| 2 | Relationship Quality and Mental Health Implications for Adolescents during the COVID-19 Pandemic: a Longitudinal Study | Afriat M; De France K; Stack DM; Serbin LA; Hollenstein T; | 36714376 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 3 | Associations between early poverty exposure and adolescent well-being: The role of childhood negative emotionality | De France K; Stack DM; Serbin LA; | 36039975 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 4 | Childhood poverty and psychological well-being: The mediating role of cumulative risk exposure. | Evans GW, De France K | 33526153 CONCORDIA |
| 5 | Implicit theories of emotion and mental health during adolescence: the mediating role of emotion regulation. | De France K, Hollenstein T | 32893732 PSYCHOLOGY |
| Title: | Associations between early poverty exposure and adolescent well-being: The role of childhood negative emotionality | ||||
| Authors: | De France K, Stack DM, Serbin LA | ||||
| Link: | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36039975/ | ||||
| DOI: | 10.1017/S0954579422000487 | ||||
| Publication: | Development and psychopathology | ||||
| Keywords: | child development; emotionality; mental health; poverty; poverty-related stress; | ||||
| PMID: | 36039975 | Category: | Date Added: | 2022-08-30 | |
| Dept Affiliation: |
PSYCHOLOGY
1 Child Study Center, Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States. 2 Psychology Department, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada. |
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Description: |
Using a longitudinal design (Wave 1 n = 164, Mage = 3.57 years, 54% female, predominantly White and French-speaking), the current study sought to answer two questions: 1) does poverty influence children's negative emotionality through heightened family-level, poverty-related stress? and 2) is negative emotionality, in turn, predictive of adolescent internalizing symptoms, externalizing behaviors, cognitive abilities, and physical health? Results confirmed an indirect pathway from family poverty to child emotionality through poverty-related stress. In addition, negative emotionality was associated with adolescent internalizing symptoms, attention difficulties, and physical health, but not externalizing symptoms, even when controlling for early poverty exposure. |



