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Your search keyword '"van IJzendoorn, Marinus H."' showing total 48 results

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48 results on '"van IJzendoorn, Marinus H."'

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1. Maternal emotional availability and perinatal depressive symptoms as predictors of early childhood executive function.

2. Maternal and paternal sensitivity: Key determinants of child attachment security examined through meta-analysis.

3. Parents' secure base script knowledge predicts observed sensitive caregiving and discipline toward twin children.

4. Intergenerational transmission of child maltreatment using a multi-informant multi-generation family design.

5. Effects of the Video-feedback intervention to promote positive parenting and sensitive discipline on mothers' neural responses to child faces: A randomized controlled ERP study including pre- and post-intervention measures.

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

7. The effects of Cognitive Bias Modification training and oxytocin administration on trust in maternal support: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial.

8. Attachment quality is related to the synchrony of mother and infant monitoring patterns.

9. The Effects of Intranasal Oxytocin Administration on Sensitive Caregiving in Mothers with Postnatal Depression.

10. Which neural mechanisms mediate the effects of a parenting intervention program on parenting behavior: design of a randomized controlled trial.

11. ASSOCIATION BETWEEN INFANT NIGHTTIME-SLEEP LOCATION AND ATTACHMENT SECURITY: NO EASY VERDICT.

12. Executive functions in early childhood: the role of maternal and paternal parenting practices.

13. Attention to Faces Expressing Negative Emotion at 7 Months Predicts Attachment Security at 14 Months.

14. Enhancing maternal sensitivity and infant attachment security with video feedback: an exploratory study in Italy.

15. Differential susceptibility in a developmental perspective: DRD4 and maternal sensitivity predicting externalizing behavior.

16. From maternal sensitivity in infancy to adult attachment representations: a longitudinal adoption study with secure base scripts.

17. Variations in maternal 5-HTTLPR affect observed sensitive parenting.

18. Oxytocin effects on mind-reading are moderated by experiences of maternal love withdrawal: an fMRI study.

19. Love withdrawal predicts electrocortical responses to emotional faces with performance feedback: a follow-up and extension.

20. The significance of attachment security for children's social competence with peers: a meta-analytic study.

21. Maternal sensitivity and internalizing problems: evidence from two longitudinal studies in early childhood.

22. Robust patterns and individual variations: stability and predictors of infant behavior in the still-face paradigm.

23. Ethnic differences in prevalence and determinants of mother-child bed-sharing in early childhood.

24. Maternal overreactive sympathetic nervous system responses to repeated infant crying predicts risk for impulsive harsh discipline of infants.

25. Oxytocin effects on complex brain networks are moderated by experiences of maternal love withdrawal.

26. The impact of oxytocin administration and maternal love withdrawal on event-related potential (ERP) responses to emotional faces with performance feedback.

27. Attachment disorganization moderates the effect of maternal postnatal depressive symptoms on infant autonomic functioning.

28. Oxytocin in postnatally depressed mothers: its influence on mood and expressed emotion.

29. One doll fits all: validation of the Leiden Infant Simulator Sensitivity Assessment (LISSA).

30. Maternal sensitivity to infants in various settings predicts harsh discipline in toddlerhood.

31. Maternal lifetime history of depression and depressive symptoms in the prenatal and early postnatal period do not predict infant-mother attachment quality in a large, population-based Dutch cohort study.

32. Dopaminergic, serotonergic, and oxytonergic candidate genes associated with infant attachment security and disorganization? In search of main and interaction effects.

33. The association between parenting and attachment security is moderated by a polymorphism in the mineralocorticoid receptor gene: evidence for differential susceptibility.

34. The influence of attachment and temperament on venipuncture distress in 14-month-old infants: the Generation R Study.

35. Subcortical structures and the neurobiology of infant attachment disorganization: a longitudinal ultrasound imaging study.

36. Attachment, depression, and cortisol: Deviant patterns in insecure-resistant and disorganized infants.

37. The significance of insecure attachment and disorganization in the development of children's externalizing behavior: a meta-analytic study.

38. The role of disconnected and extremely insensitive parenting in the development of disorganized attachment: validation of a new measure.

39. Oxytocin receptor (OXTR) and serotonin transporter (5-HTT) genes associated with observed parenting.

40. Differential susceptibility to discipline: the moderating effect of child temperament on the association between maternal discipline and early childhood externalizing problems.

41. Joint attention and attachment in toddlers with autism.

42. DRD4 7-repeat polymorphism moderates the association between maternal unresolved loss or trauma and infant disorganization.

43. Attachment-based intervention for enhancing sensitive discipline in mothers of 1- to 3-year-old children at risk for externalizing behavior problems: a randomized controlled trial.

44. In search of shared and nonshared environmental factors in security of attachment: a behavior-genetic study of the association between sensitivity and attachment security.

45. Effects of attachment-based interventions on maternal sensitivity and infant attachment: differential susceptibility of highly reactive infants.

46. Attachment of mothers and children with recurrent asthmatic bronchitis.

47. The importance of shared environment in mother-infant attachment security: a behavioral genetic study.

48. Configurations of mother-child and father-child attachment as predictors of internalizing and externalizing behavioral problems: An individual participant data (IPD) meta-analysis

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