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Your search keyword '"Bakermans-Kranenburg, Marian J."' showing total 15 results

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15 results on '"Bakermans-Kranenburg, Marian J."'

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1. Exploring everyday state attachment dynamics in middle childhood.

2. Exploring the meaning of unresolved loss and trauma in more than 1,000 Adult Attachment Interviews.

3. Improving parenting, child attachment, and externalizing behaviors: Meta-analysis of the first 25 randomized controlled trials on the effects of Video-feedback Intervention to promote Positive Parenting and Sensitive Discipline.

4. The latent structure of the adult attachment interview: Large sample evidence from the collaboration on attachment transmission synthesis.

5. The genetic and environmental etiology of child maltreatment in a parent-based extended family design.

6. Attachment representations and autonomic regulation in maltreating and nonmaltreating mothers.

7. Insensitive parenting may accelerate the development of the amygdala–medial prefrontal cortex circuit.

8. Methylation matters: FK506 binding protein 51 (FKBP5) methylation moderates the associations of FKBP5 genotype and resistant attachment with stress regulation.

9. Beating the brain about abuse: Empirical and meta-analytic studies of the association between maltreatment and hippocampal volume across childhood and adolescence.

10. Genetic differential susceptibility on trial: Meta-analytic support from randomized controlled experiments.

11. Maternal depressive symptoms and sensitivity are related to young children's facial expression recognition: The Generation R Study.

12. Infants' responsiveness, attachment, and indiscriminate friendliness after international adoption from institutions or foster care in China: Application of Emotional Availability Scales to adoptive families.

13. Differential susceptibility to rearing environment depending on dopamine-related genes: New evidence and a meta-analysis.

14. Differential susceptibility to the environment: An evolutionary–neurodevelopmental theory.

15. Attachment security and disorganization in maltreating and high-risk families: A series of meta-analyses.

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