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1
Exploring the Collective Wisdom of Support Interactions on Mental Health Subreddits
Kaveladze, Benjamin Thomas. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2021
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2
Childhood cognitive development in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, social isolation, and prenatal stress: Establishing a prenatal cohort in East Tennessee ...
Oliveira, Daniela. - : Open Science Framework, 2021
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3
Peers, Perceptions of Teaching Practices, and Implications for Student Engagement
McKellar, Sarah. - 2020
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4
Linguistic Markers of Empathic Accuracy in Everyday Life for Romantic Couples
Karan, Alexander. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2019
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5
Examining the mediating role of teacher-related variables on the relationship between classroom management and student social--emotional and behavioral risk
Taylor, Crystal Nichole. - : University of Missouri--Columbia, 2019
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6
The Use of a Values Affirming Intervention: Does It Impact Math Scores and Semester Grade Point Averages in a Student Support Services Population
In: All Graduate Theses and Dissertations (2019)
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7
International Students’ Integration in Classroom: Strategies and Support by Teachers and Local Students in Higher Education
In: Papers from the International Association for Cross-Cultural Psychology Conferences (2018)
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8
Unable to be a Human Being in Front of Other People: A Qualitative Study of Self-Isolation Among People Living with HIV/AIDS in China.
In: Journal of clinical psychology in medical settings, vol 24, iss 3-4 (2017)
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9
Attune With Baby: An Innovative Attunement Program for Parents and Families With Integrated Evaluation
In: Dissertations & Theses (2017)
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10
Attune With Baby: An Innovative Attunement Program for Parents and Families With Integrated Evaluation
In: http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=antioch1499289825291502 (2017)
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11
Does Virtual Communication with Parents Help Students Recover from Daily Stressors?: Daily and Experimental Tests with First Year College Students
Abstract: Emerging adulthood, specifically the transition to college, is often marked by changing social networks, increased responsibility, and separation from the parental home environment. Educators, researchers, and those dedicated to the healthy development of young people are invested in understating how and why social support is important for students’ adjustment, wellbeing, and their ability to cope with the daily stressors that accompany this notable transition. In particular, parents are believed to be a key source of both perceived (stable) and enacted (immediate) support. Strong parental relationships predict students’ overall achievement and adjustment in the first year of college. Less is known about how parental relationships may impact students’ daily wellbeing and whether parents can provide helpful enacted support through daily communication. With the rapid ubiquitous rise in mobile technologies, students and their parents are now communicating more frequently during this transition; however, very little is known about whether daily virtual parental communication can help students cope with daily stressors. This study contributes to the existing literature by 1) describing students’ daily in-person and virtual communication with parents during the beginning of college, 2) examining whether students' daily virtual parental communication is associated with their same-day wellbeing, 3) testing whether daily virtual communication (i.e., enacted support) buffers daily responses to stressors, 4) examining the specificity of parental support (versus other sources of support), and 5) exploring whether the strength of students’ parental relationships (i.e., perceived support) is associated with students’ ‘reactivity’ to daily stressors. This dissertation consists of three studies that used daily assessments (i.e., ecological momentary assessments: EMA) and experimental manipulation to understand the momentary interplay between exposure to stressors, parent-child virtual communication, and students’ wellbeing during the transition to college. Study 1, a 7-day EMA study of 136 first and second year college students, found that texting with a parent moderated the same-day associations between daily stressors and affect. Although daily parental virtual communication was not directly associated with same-day affect, on days when students reported a stressor and texted with a parent, they had lower negative and higher positive affect compared to stressor days when they did not text with a parent. Extending research by Gross (2009), Study 2 used an experimental paradigm in which 101 first year college students completed a virtual social exclusion stressor task (i.e., Cyberball) and then were assigned to text a parent, text a stranger, or play a solitary computer game. Students who ‘reached out’ via text message to parents or strangers demonstrated faster recovery in self-esteem following the experimentally induced stressor compared to students assigned to the no contact control. Study 3 followed the same 101 first year students with a 10-day EMA study. On days when students reported a stressor and called/texted with their parents (versus days without virtual parental contact), they reported lower negative affect and slept longer that night, as monitored objectively with a wearable wristband. Analyses testing for specificity across the three studies found that only virtual communication with parents or romantic partners, but not other texting patterns (number of texts or contacts) or partners (texting with acquaintances, siblings, roommates, or friends), moderated the daily associations between stressors and wellbeing. In addition, students with higher reported maternal relationship quality were less ‘reactive’ to stressors, such that in both experimental and naturalistic settings students with lower (versus higher) maternal relationship quality had steeper increases in negative affect when they experienced a stressor. Overall, the three studies found converging evidence that daily virtual communications with parents may aid students in dealing with daily stressors, especially for reducing negative affect. Possible explanations, ideas for future research, and implications are discussed.
Keyword: ecological momentary assessment; emerging adulthood; parent-child relationships; Psychology; social support; virtual communication
URL: https://hdl.handle.net/10161/16232
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12
Associations Between Early Maternal Depressive Symptom Trajectories And Toddlers’ Felt Security At 18 Months: Are Boys And Girls At Differential Risk?
Beeghly, Marjorie; Partridge, Ty; Tronick, Ed. - : Erlbaum, 2017. : Wiley Periodicals, Inc., 2017
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13
Multivariate pattern classification of pediatric Tourette syndrome using functional connectivity MRI.
In: Developmental science, vol 19, iss 4 (2016)
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14
Indirect Effects of Teacher Support on Emotional and Academic Outcomes for English Language Learners ...
Unkn Unknown. - : Temple University. Libraries, 2016
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15
The Immersion Effect
Potts,Andrew A. - 2016
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16
The Effects of Psychopathic Traits on Social Support Networks
In: UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones (2016)
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17
Feasibility of a Peer Support Oriented Dialectical Behavior Therapy Skills Training Massive Open Online Course for Emotion Dysregulation
In: Senior Theses (2015)
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18
Fusion analysis of functional MRI data for classification of individuals based on patterns of activation.
In: Brain and Mind Institute Researchers' Publications (2015)
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19
Modelling Psychological Needs for User-dependent Contextual Suggestion
In: DTIC (2014)
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20
Exploration of Acoustic Features for Automatic Vowel Discrimination in Spontaneous Speech
In: http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1339695879 (2012)
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