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How Does Parental Stress Affect Child Outcomes?
Natasha Cabrera has completed a paper on “Parenting and early predictors of Latino children’s cognitive and social development: Direct and Indirect Effects”
Located in Research / Selected Research
Article Reference Troff document (with manpage macros)How Early Is Too Early? Identification of Elevated, Persistent Problem Behavior in Childhood
We inquire how early in childhood children most at risk for problematic patterns of internalizing and externalizing behaviors can be accurately classified. Yearly measures of anxiety/depressive symptoms and aggressive behaviors (ages 6–13;  n  = 334), respectively, are used to identify behavioral trajectories. We then assess the degree to which limited spans of yearly information allow for the correct classification into the elevated, persistent pattern of the problem behavior, identified theoretically and empirically as high-risk and most in need of intervention. The true positive rate (sensitivity) is below 70% for anxiety/depressive symptoms and aggressive behaviors using behavioral information through ages 6 and 7. Conversely, by age 9, over 90% of the high-risk individuals are correctly classified (i.e., sensitivity) for anxiety/depressive symptoms, but this threshold is not met until age 12 for aggressive behaviors. Notably, the false positive rate of classification for both high-risk problem behaviors is consistently low using each limited age span of data (< 5%). These results suggest that correct classification into highest risk groups of childhood problem behavior is limited using behavioral information observed at early ages. Prevention programming targeting those who will display persistent, elevated levels of problem behavior should be cognizant of the degree of misclassification and how this varies with the accumulation of behavioral information. Continuous assessment of problem behaviors is needed throughout childhood in order to continually identify high-risk individuals most in need of intervention as behavior patterns are sufficiently realized.
Located in Retired Persons / Terence Thornberry, Ph.D. / Terence Thornberry Publications
FileHow Firms Respond to Business Cycles: The Role of Firm Age and Firm Size
John Haltiwanger, University of Maryland, et al.; 2013-020
Located in Research / Working Papers / WP Documents
How to overcome vaccine distrust among Black Americans
Rashawn Ray pens OpEd in The Hill
Located in News
Hubacek, Feng, and Yu Explore the Impact of Globalization and Trade on the Environment
The consequences of affluence: Consumption of large amounts of material goods places an unfair environmental burden on less developed areas
Located in News
Improving Educational Equity and Engagement During the COVID-19 Pandemic and Beyond
Amy Lewin and Kevin Roy work with Montgomery County, Maryland, public schools
Located in Research / Selected Research
Inaugural Schelling Lecture
Glenn C. Loury, Merton P. Stoltz Professor of the Social Sciences and Professor of Economics at Brown University
Located in Coming Up
Incarceration and Black Progress
Becky Pettit, Professor of Sociology, University of Washington
Located in Coming Up
India Human Development Survey Second Wave (IDHS-II)
An NICHD grant valued at about $2.5 million over five years is funding the second wave of survey research for IHDS
Located in Research / Selected Research
India Human Development Survey - Wave Three
NICHD-R01 - Dr. Sonalde Desai
Located in Research / Selected Research