Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Howe N" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Humorous peer play and social understanding in childhood Paine AL; Hashmi S; Fink E; Mitchell P; Howe N; 40355511
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Sibling-directed internal state language, perspective taking, and affective behavior Howe N; 1786731
EDUCATION
3 "All the sheeps are dead. He murdered them": sibling pretense, negotiation, internal state language, and relationship quality Howe N; Petrakos H; Rinaldi CM; 9499566
EDUCATION
4 "No! The lambs can stay out because they got cozies": constructive and destructive sibling conflict, pretend play, and social understanding Howe N; Rinaldi CM; Jennings M; Petrakos H; 12361312
EDUCATION
5 "This is a bad dog, you know...": constructing shared meanings during sibling pretend play Howe N; Petrakos H; Rinaldi CM; LeFebvre R; 16026496
EDUCATION
6 Playmates and teachers: reciprocal and complementary interactions between siblings Howe N; Recchia H; 16402864
EDUCATION
7 Sibling relationships as sources of risk and resilience in the development and maintenance of internalizing and externalizing problems during childhood and adolescence Dirks MA; Persram R; Recchia HE; Howe N; 26254557
EDUCATION
8 Parental autonomy support in relation to preschool aged children's behavior: Examining positive guidance, negative control, and responsiveness Linkiewich D; Martinovich VV; Rinaldi CM; Howe N; Gokiert R; 33691509
EDUCATION
9 Positive and negative actions early in the relationship predict later interactions among toddlers Lahat A; Lou Z; Perlman M; Howe N; Santo JB; Recchia HE; Bukowski WM; Ross HS; 36327252
CONCORDIA
10 Naturalistic Parent Teaching in the Home Environment During Early Childhood Della Porta SL; Sukmantari P; Howe N; Farhat F; Ross HS; 35386906
PSYCHOLOGY
11 Differentiating typical from atypical perpetration of sibling-directed aggression during the preschool years Dirks MA; Recchia HE; Estabrook R; Howe N; Petitclerc A; Burns JL; Briggs-Gowan MJ; Wakschlag LS; 29963711
PSYCHOLOGY
12 'H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, PEE! Get it? Pee!': Siblings' shared humour in childhood Paine AL; Howe N; Karajian G; Hay DF; DeHart G; 30623983
PSYCHOLOGY

 

Title:Differentiating typical from atypical perpetration of sibling-directed aggression during the preschool years
Authors:Dirks MARecchia HEEstabrook RHowe NPetitclerc ABurns JLBriggs-Gowan MJWakschlag LS
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29963711/
DOI:10.1111/jcpp.12939
Publication:Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines
Keywords:Siblingsaggressionpreschool
PMID:29963711 Category:J Child Psychol Psychiatry Date Added:2020-07-23
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 Department of Psychology, McGill University, Montréal, QC, Canada.
2 Department of Education, Concordia University, Montréal, QC, Canada.
3 Department of Medical Social Sciences, Institute for Innovations in Developmental Sciences, Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, USA.
4 University of Connecticut, Farmington, CT, USA.

Description:

Background: Sibling aggression is common and often viewed as benign. Although sibling aggression can be harmful for the victims, it may also be a marker of clinical risk for the aggressor. We differentiated typical from atypical levels of perpetration of sibling-directed aggression among preschoolers, a developmental period in which aggression is a normative misbehavior, by (a) identifying how frequently aggressive behaviors targeted at a sibling must occur to be psychometrically atypical; (b) mapping the dimensional spectrum of sibling-directed aggression from typical, more commonly occurring behaviors to rarer, more atypical, actions; and (c) comparing the psychometric atypicality and typical-to-atypical spectrum of sibling-directed aggression and peer-directed aggression.

Methods: Parents (N = 1,524) of 3- (39.2%), 4-(36.7%), and 5-(24.1%) year-olds (51.9% girls, 41.1% African-American, 31.9% Hispanic; 44.0% below the federal poverty line) completed the MAP-DB, which assesses how often children engage in aggressive behaviors. We used item-response theory (IRT) to address our objectives.

Results: Most aggressive behaviors toward siblings were psychometrically atypical when they occurred 'most days' or more; in contrast, most behaviors targeted at peers were atypical when they occurred 'some days' or more. With siblings, relational aggression was more atypical than verbal aggression, whereas with peers, both relational and physical aggression were more atypical than verbal aggression. In both relationships, the most typical behavior was a verbally aggressive action. Results were broadly replicated in a second, independent sample.

Conclusions: These findings are a first step toward specifying features of sibling aggression that are markers of clinical risk and belie the notion that sibling aggression is inherently normative.





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