92 results on '"Kobak R"'
Search Results
2. Attachment and Emotion Regulation during Mother-Teen Problem Solving: A Control Theory Analysis.
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Kobak, R. Rogers
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Correlated teens' strategies for regulating their attachment to their mothers as measured by the Adult Attachment Interview, and emotion regulation during teen-mother problem solving. Teens with secure strategies engaged in problem-solving discussions characterized by less dysfunctional anger and less avoidance of problem solving than other teens. (MDM)
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- 1993
3. Psychophysiology in Attachment Interviews: Converging Evidence for Deactivating Strategies.
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Dozier, Mary and Kobak, R. Rogers
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Monitored skin conductance of college students while they recalled experiences of separation, rejection, and threat from parents. Students who diverted attention from attachment information to deal with attachment-related issues showed increases in skin conductance levels from baseline. (BC)
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- 1992
4. Attachment in Late Adolescence: Working Models, Affect Regulation, and Representations of Self and Others
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Kobak, R. Rogers and Sceery, Amy
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- 1988
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5. Attachment
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Kobak, R., primary and Madsen, S.D., additional
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- 2011
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6. Emotional processing in attachment-based family therapy for suicidal adolescents
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Lifshitz, Chen, primary, Tsvieli, Noa, additional, Bar-Kalifa, Eran, additional, Abbott, Caroline, additional, Diamond, Guy S., additional, Roger Kobak, R., additional, and Diamond, Gary M., additional
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- 2020
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7. Attachment in marriage: effects of security and accuracy of working models
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Kobak, R. Rogers and Hazan, Cindy
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Communication in marriage -- Research ,Behavioral assessment -- Research ,Parent and child -- Psychological aspects ,Psychology and mental health ,Sociology and social work - Abstract
Working models of attachment in martial functioning were examined. The security and accuracy of working models were measured with a new Q-sort method. Spouses with secure working models (self as relying on partner as psychologically available) showed more constructive modulation of emotion and reported better adjustment. the accuracy of internal working models, measured with an objective index of spouses' agreement about models, was associated with independent reports of marital adjustment and observers' ratings of communication in problem-solving and confiding tasks. Behavior in communication tasks showed predictable associations with attachment security. Husbands' attachment security covaried with wives' rejection during problem solving, and wives' security covaried with quality of husbands' listening during a confiding task. A reciprocal interaction view of working models and marital functioning is supported.
- Published
- 1991
8. Emotions system functioning and emotion regulation
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Izard, Carroll E., primary and Kobak, R. Rogers, additional
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- 1991
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9. Emotional processing in attachment-based family therapy for suicidal adolescents.
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Lifshitz, Chen, Tsvieli, Noa, Bar-Kalifa, Eran, Abbott, Caroline, Diamond, Guy S., Roger Kobak, R., and Diamond, Gary M.
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FAMILY psychotherapy ,TEENAGERS ,ANGER management ,EMOTIONS ,SHAME ,CLINICAL trials - Abstract
Objective: This study examined proposed sequential pathways through which suicidal adolescents are thought to shift from secondary global distress and rejecting anger to primary adaptive hurt, grief and assertive anger in the context of attachment-based family therapy (ABFT). Method: Participants were 39 suicidal adolescents who had received 16 weeks of ABFT as part of a randomized clinical trial, and who had been assigned to one of three outcome groups (i.e., good responders, slow responders and non-responders). Adolescents' in-session emotions were observationally coded using the Classification of Affective-Meaning States. Results: Across outcome groups, adolescents evidenced shifts from global distress to maladaptive shame, from maladaptive rejecting anger to adaptive assertive anger, and from adaptive assertive anger to adaptive grief/hurt. Adolescents who did not respond to treatment evidenced higher rates of maladaptive global distress. Conclusions: Findings are discussed in the context of ABFT and sequential emotional processing theories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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10. Introduction to the special issue: attachment-based treatments for adolescents
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Kobak, R. Rogers, primary and Kerig, Patricia K., additional
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- 2015
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11. Economically Disadvantaged Children With Reading Difficulties Are at Risk for Comorbid Internalizing Symptoms
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Ackerman, B. P., primary, Izard, C. E., additional, Kobak, R., additional, Brown, E. D., additional, and Smith, C., additional
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- 2007
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12. Attachment and depressive symptoms during adolescence: A developmental pathways analysis
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Kobak, R. Rogers, primary, Sudler, Nanette, additional, and Gamble, Wendy, additional
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- 1991
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13. Reliance on Partner & Psychological Availability scales
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Kobak, R. Rogers, primary and Hazan, Cindy, additional
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- 1991
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14. The development of commitment and attachment in dating relationships: attachment security as relationship construct.
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Duemmler, S L and Kobak, R
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- 2001
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15. Family Therapy as a Rite of Passage: Play's the Thing.
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KOBAK, R. ROGERS and WATERS, DAVID B.
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- 1984
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16. Defining and measuring of attachment bonds: Comment on Kurdek (2009)
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Kobak R
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- 2009
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17. Synthesis, Electrochemistry, Spectroelectrochemistry, and Electrochromism of Metallophthalocyanines Substituted with Four (2,4,5‐Trimethylphenyl)ethynyl Groups
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Sevgi Özcan, Rabia Zeynep Kobak, Özlem Budak, Atıf Koca, Zehra Altuntaş Bayır, and Ozcan S., Kobak R. Z., BUDAK Ö., KOCA A., Bayır Z.
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PHTHALOCYANINE COMPLEXES ,Temel Bilimler (SCI) ,Sonogashira cross-coupling reaction ,Filtration and Separation ,Physical Chemistry ,Kimya ,MANGANESE ,Analytical Chemistry ,CHEMISTRY, ANALYTICAL ,ZINC(II) ,CHEMISTRY ,ELECTROPOLYMERIZATION ,ZN(II) ,Electrochemistry ,ELEKTROKİMYA ,COBALT ,Spectroelectrochemistry ,Electrochromism ,Temel Bilimler ,Fizikokimya ,General Chemistry ,KİMYA, ANALİTİK ,Elektrokimya ,Chemistry (miscellaneous) ,PHOTOPHYSICAL PROPERTIES ,Natural Sciences (SCI) ,Physical Sciences ,PERIPHERAL POSITIONS ,Metallophthalocyanine ,Analitik Kimya ,Natural Sciences ,METAL-FREE - Abstract
The synthesis of the novel phthalonitrile containing (2,4,5-trimethylphenyl)ethynyl moieties was performed using the palladium-catalyzed Sonogashira crosslinking methodology. Cobalt phthalocyanine was obtained with the cyclotetramerization reaction of this dinitrile derivative, while the synthesis of zinc and manganese phthalocyanines was reported by the Sonogashira coupling reaction of the appropriate iodo phthalocyanines. Voltammetric and electrochromic analyses were applied to determine the possible applications of these complexes in different electrochemical/display technologies. The rich redox responses of the complexes had a good influence on the spectroelectrochemical characters of them. Electrochromic measurements of the complexes indicated fast, and reversible color changes with reasonable optical contrasts.
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- 2022
18. Attachment-based family therapy versus nondirective supportive therapy for lesbian, gay, bisexual and questioning adolescents with depression, and suicidal ideation: An exploratory study.
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Russon J, Abbott CH, Jin B, Rivers AS, Winston-Lindeboom P, Kobak R, and Diamond GS
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- Female, Adolescent, Humans, Depression therapy, Family Therapy methods, Bisexuality, Suicidal Ideation, Sexual and Gender Minorities
- Abstract
Introduction: Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and questioning (LGBQ) adolescents are particularly at risk for suicidal ideation; however, little clinical research is focused on treating this population. Attachment-based family therapy (ABFT) is among the few empirically supported youth suicide treatments adapted for LGBQ adolescents. The purpose of this exploratory study is to determine the differential treatment effects and rates of change for LGBQ and heterosexual adolescents with depression and suicidal ideation receiving either ABFT or family enhanced nondirective supportive therapy (FE-NST)., Method: The sample included 129 adolescents (31% LGBQ), ages 12-18 randomized to the two treatment groups. Multilevel modeling was used to examine individual changes in depression and suicidal ideation over the 16-week treatment., Results: Results revealed that LGBQ adolescents in the ABFT condition showed a greater rate of reduction in depressive symptoms over treatment, slope = -0.94, p < 0.001, than did LGBQ adolescents in the NST condition, slope = -0.41, p = 0.12. Heterosexual adolescents showed symptom reduction in both treatment conditions (ABFT slope = -0.47, p < 0.001; NST slope = -0.79, t (113) = -7.48, p < 0.001). Changes in suicidal ideation were found across time, but not across conditions., Conclusion: LGBQ adolescents in the ABFT condition had a sharper decrease in depressive symptoms and better outcomes at week 16., (© 2023 The Authors. Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Association of Suicidology.)
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- 2023
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19. Immersive and reflective recall of a suicidal episode: Implications for assessing and treating suicidal adolescents.
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Zisk A, Abbott CH, Ewing ESK, Fitter MH, Diamond GS, and Kobak R
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- Female, Humans, Adolescent, Male, Risk Factors, Emotions, Protective Factors, Suicidal Ideation, Suicide
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Objective: The present study tested the validity and clinical utility of adolescents' reports of two distinct modes of processing during the recall of a suicidal episode in the Suicide Narrative Interview (SNI). Recall Intensity (RI) items were designed to capture a tendency to become immersed in thoughts and feelings during the interview, while Meaning Making (MM) items were designed to assess more distant and reflective processing., Method: The construct and predictive validity of pretreatment MM and RI was tested in a 16-week randomized clinical trial (RCT) for depressed and suicidal adolescents ( N = 113, M
age = 14.95, 84.1% female, 51.8% Black/African American). Adolescents rated MM and RI immediately following the SNI during a baseline assessment., Results: Baseline MM was associated with protective factors related to reduced suicidality, and RI was associated with several risk factors for suicidal symptoms. Adolescents who reported high MM and low RI reported greater reductions in both suicidal ideation and depressive symptoms during the RCT., Conclusions: The results support MM and RI as two distinct modes of how adolescents process memories of suicidal episodes and highlight the potential clinical utility of RI and MM in assessing and treating suicidal adolescents. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).- Published
- 2023
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20. A Learning Theory Approach to Attachment Theory: Exploring Clinical Applications.
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Bosmans G, Van Vlierberghe L, Bakermans-Kranenburg MJ, Kobak R, Hermans D, and van IJzendoorn MH
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- Child, Child, Preschool, Humans, Parenting, Parents education, Video Recording, Feedback, Psychological, Parent-Child Relations
- Abstract
Although clinicians typically acknowledge the importance of insecure attachment as one factor that can contribute to children's psychopathology, translating attachment theory into clinical practice has proved a challenge. By specifying some of the mechanisms through which the child's attachment develops and changes, learning theory can enhance attachment based approaches to therapy. Specifically, interventions building on operant (parent management training) and classical (exposure therapy) learning can be used to stimulate new learning that increases the child's security and confidence in the parent's availability and responsiveness. To explore the clinical application and utility of a Learning Theory of Attachment (LTA), we focus on two attachment-focused interventions: Video-feedback Intervention to promote Positive Parenting and Sensitive Discipline (VIPP-SD) and Middle Childhood Attachment-based Family Therapy (MCAT). VIPP-SD is an evidence-based parent management training designed to promote sensitive parenting and secure attachment in early childhood. MCAT is a recently developed intervention that uses exposure to stimulate secure attachment in middle childhood. LTA sheds light on the mechanisms set in train by VIPP-SD and MCAT facilitating the induction of professionals in clinical applications., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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21. Family relationships and the interpersonal theory of suicide in a clinically suicidal sample of adolescents.
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Hunt QA, Krauthamer Ewing ES, Weiler LM, Ogbaselase FA, Mendenhall T, McGuire JK, Monet M, Kobak R, and Diamond GS
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- Adolescent, Anxiety, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Psychological Theory, Risk Factors, Family Relations, Suicidal Ideation
- Abstract
In a sample of suicidal adolescents (N = 117), we sought to identify how adolescents' attachment to their parents related to a key mechanism of suicide from the Interpersonal Theory of Suicide (IPTS). We tested both attachment-anxiety and attachment-avoidance, to both mother- and father-figures as correlates of the IPTS construct, perceived burdensomeness (PB). In addition, we tested PB as a mediator between these attachment variables and adolescent suicide ideation in a path analysis. Our path analysis indicated both mother- and father-related attachment anxiety were associated with PB and PB was related to suicide ideation. We also found an indirect effect of father-related attachment anxiety on suicide ideation. This study provides empirical support for earlier systemic work that proposes how family relationships may influence an adolescent's suicidal ideation. Finally, we provide practical clinical suggestions for how therapists may implement a systemic framework to address a suicidal adolescent and their family relationships., (© 2021 American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy.)
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- 2022
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22. Anxiety-related difficulties in goal-directed behavior predict worse treatment outcome among adolescents treated for suicidal ideation and depressive symptoms.
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Herres J, James KM, Bounoua N, Krauthamer Ewing ES, Kobak R, and Diamond GS
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- Adolescent, Anxiety therapy, Anxiety Disorders therapy, Female, Goals, Humans, Male, Risk Factors, Treatment Outcome, Depression, Suicidal Ideation
- Abstract
Although treatments for youth at risk for suicide have been successful, they are not similarly effective for everyone. Anxiety may interfere with adolescents' ability to engage with therapy and explain why some adolescents do not respond as well as others to treatment. The current study tested whether an anxiety diagnosis predicted treatment outcome among a sample of adolescents with suicidal ideation and depressive symptoms participating in either attachment-based family therapy or family-enhanced nondirective supportive therapy (N = 129; M age = 14.87, SD = 1.68; 81.9% female). The data set that the current study used had a high representation of Black/African American adolescents (48.8% of sample), which is valuable, as few studies have included adequate representation of this population. A significant indirect effect (.88; 95% confidence interval [.01, 2.64]) showed that across both treatment conditions, participants who met criteria for an anxiety disorder had greater difficulties engaging in goal-directed behavior midtreatment, and these difficulties, in turn, predicted more posttreatment suicidal ideation. The effect of anxiety on treatment outcome via difficulties with goal-directed behavior was nonspecific to the treatment condition. However, attachment-based family therapy was superior to family-enhanced nondirective supportive therapy in improving this aspect of emotion regulation among adolescents who did not have anxiety. In addition, difficulties with goal-directed behavior on treatment outcome were worse for adolescents' who reported greater attachment avoidance to their parents. Future research should test whether targeting goal-directed behavior and attachment avoidance would result in better treatment outcome for adolescents with suicidal ideation and anxiety. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2021
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23. Exploring the relations between interpersonal risk and adolescent suicidality during treatment.
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Abbott CH, Zisk A, Herres J, Diamond GS, Krauthamer Ewing S, and Kobak R
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- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Male, Parent-Child Relations, Psychological Theory, Psychotherapy methods, Risk Factors, Suicidal Ideation, Surveys and Questionnaires, Depression therapy, Family Therapy methods, Suicide psychology, Suicide Prevention
- Abstract
Objective: Despite considerable evidence that supports perceived burdensomeness (PB) and thwarted belongingness (TB) as risk factors for suicidal ideation (SI), far less is known about the direction of effects between these constructs in treatments for suicidal adolescents. The present study examined bidirectional relations between PB, TB, and adolescents' suicidal ideation (SI) during a 16-week randomized clinical trial., Method: 129 depressed and suicidal adolescents completed PB, TB, and SI measures at three time points: baseline (T1), mid-treatment (T2), and treatment completion (T3). Random-intercept cross-lagged panel models (RI-CLPM) examined within-subject direction of effects between interpersonal variables (PB & TB) and suicidal ideation (SI) in the first and second halves of treatment., Results: Within-subjects, autoregressive paths indicated significant carryover in PB and SI. In the first half of treatment, a significant cross-lagged path indicated that T1 PB predicted change in T2 SI, and in the last half of treatment change in T2 SI predicted change in T3 PB. There were no significant auto-regressive or cross-lagged effects for TB., Conclusions: In the first half of treatment, baseline PB predicted fewer reductions in SI suggesting that PB initially moderated adolescents' response to treatment. However, in the last half of treatment, initial reductions in SI predicted subsequent reductions in PB suggesting that adolescents' initial response to treatment decreased their perceptions of burdening others. The clinical and treatment implications of these bidirectional findings are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2021
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24. Therapist Interventions Associated with Productive Emotional Processing in the Context of Attachment-Based Family Therapy for Depressed and Suicidal Adolescents.
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Tsvieli N, Nir-Gottlieb O, Lifshitz C, Diamond GS, Kobak R, and Diamond GM
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- Adolescent, Adult, Anger, Depression psychology, Emotional Adjustment, Female, Humans, Male, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Parent-Child Relations, Treatment Outcome, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Depression therapy, Family Therapy methods, Object Attachment, Suicidal Ideation
- Abstract
Productive emotional processing is considered a key change mechanism in attachment-based family therapy (ABFT). This study examined the impact of attachment-based family therapy therapist interventions aimed to promote productive emotional processing of primary adaptive emotions in a sample of 30 depressed and suicidal adolescents who had participated in a larger randomized clinical trial. Results of sequential analyses revealed that relational reframes and therapists' focus on primary adaptive emotions were associated with the subsequent initiation of adolescents' productive emotional processing of primary adaptive emotions. In contrast, interpretations, reassurances, and therapists' focus on adolescents' rejecting anger toward their parents were all followed by the discontinuation of adolescents' emotional processing that had already begun. Finally, therapists' general encouragement of affect and focus on adolescents' unmet attachment/identity needs were associated with both the initiation of adolescents' productive emotional processing, and with the discontinuation of such processing once it had already begun. Theoretical and clinical implications are discussed., (© 2019 Family Process Institute.)
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- 2020
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25. Testing Basic Assumptions of the Interpersonal Needs Questionnaire-15 in a Sample of Clinically Depressed and Suicidal Youth.
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Hunt QA, Weiler LM, McGuire J, Mendenhall T, Kobak R, and Diamond GS
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- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Female, Humans, Male, Psychological Theory, Risk Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Interpersonal Relations, Suicidal Ideation
- Abstract
Objective: Suicide is a leading cause of death in adolescence. The mechanisms of adolescent suicidality, however, are not fully understood. Although the Interpersonal-Psychological Theory of Suicide, as assessed by the Interpersonal Needs Questionnaire-15 (INQ), may be a promising framework, systematic study of its utility during adolescence is lacking., Method: To this end, we utilized factor analyses and hierarchical regression analyses to test the factor structure, correlates, and predictive validity of the INQ in a sample of clinically depressed and suicidal adolescents (N = 120, aged 12-18). The sample was mostly female (81.9%), ethnically diverse (68.2% non-White) and with nearly a third identifying as a sexual minority (31.8%)., Results: Contrary to studies including adult samples in which a two-factor solution is identified, results within this sample indicated three factors: perceived burdensomeness, thwarted belongingness, and perceived isolation. Perceived burdensomeness and the interaction between perceived burdensomeness and perceived isolation predicted suicide ideation above and beyond depression, but thwarted belongingness and perceived isolation did not., Conclusion: Perceived burdensomeness appears to play a role in adolescent suicidality and may be a point of intervention, yet the notable deviation from previous findings and the relative weakness of two of the factors warrant further study., (© 2019 The American Association of Suicidology.)
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- 2020
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26. Parent-teen communication predicts treatment benefit for depressed and suicidal adolescents.
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Zisk A, Abbott CH, Bounoua N, Diamond GS, and Kobak R
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- Adolescent, Behavior Observation Techniques, Female, Humans, Male, Self Report, Adolescent Behavior, Communication, Depression therapy, Family Therapy methods, Object Attachment, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Parent-Child Relations, Suicidal Ideation
- Abstract
Objective: Although there are currently several efficacious treatments for depressed and suicidal adolescents, less is known about predictors and moderators of adolescents' treatment response. A growing literature has identified family functioning as a prognostic indicator of adolescents' likelihood of benefiting from treatment. The current study tested both observational and perceived measures of family functioning as indicators of adolescents' response to 2 treatment conditions., Method: The sample consisted of 129 depressed and suicidal adolescents ( M
age = 14.96, 82.9% female, 56% Black/African American) who were randomized to attachment-based family therapy or family-enhanced nondirective supportive therapy (Diamond et al., 2019). Baseline assessments of family functioning included ratings of parent-adolescent communication coded with the Goal-Corrected Partnership in Adolescence Coding System (Lyons-Ruth, Hennighausen, & Holmes, 2005) and adolescent and parent reports of Family Conflict and Cohesion from the Self-Report of Family Functioning (Bloom, 1985)., Results: Adolescents who engaged in more uncooperative communication with their parents during a 10-min conflict discussion showed greater reductions in depressive symptoms in both treatments. Adolescents from traditionally underserved (non-White or lower income) families showed greater reductions in suicidal ideation in both treatments., Conclusions: Attachment-based family therapy and family-enhanced nondirective supportive therapy were most effective for adolescents from traditionally underserved families and adolescents who engaged in less cooperative communication with their caregivers. Observational ratings of parent-adolescent communication were better prognostic indicators of treatment response than were self-reported indicators of global family functioning. Implications for generalizing these results to other treatments for depressed and suicidal adolescents are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).- Published
- 2019
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27. Predicting Patterns of Treatment Response and Outcome for Adolescents Who Are Suicidal and Depressed.
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Abbott CH, Zisk A, Bounoua N, Diamond GS, and Kobak R
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- Adolescent, Child, Depressive Disorder, Major psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Philadelphia, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Depressive Disorder, Major therapy, Family Therapy methods, Object Attachment, Suicidal Ideation
- Abstract
Objective: Although several treatments have been shown to be effective in treatment of youth suicidal thoughts and behaviors (STBs), there is a pressing need to account for the substantial variation in adolescents' response to and outcomes from these treatments., Method: Secondary analyses of data from a 16-week randomized trial of Attachment-Based Family Therapy (ABFT) and Family-Enhanced NonDirective Supportive Therapy (FE-NST) identified distinct classes of adolescents' treatment response. Established risk factors for STBs, along with treatment condition and sociodemographic variables, were then tested as predictors of class membership., Results: Three patterns of adolescents' treatment response and outcome were identified: a) nonresponders (15.8%), b) good responders (57.5%), and c) partial responders (26.7%). After controlling for initial symptom severity, nonresponders were more likely to have higher levels of nonsuicidal self-injury and pessimism and were more likely to meet diagnostic criteria for major depressive disorder (MDD) than good or partial responders. Partial responders were more likely than good responders to meet criteria for MDD and to have higher perceived burdensomeness., Conclusion: Although most adolescents showed significant symptom reductions with both treatments, adolescents with higher pretreatment levels of pessimism, MDD, nonsuicidal self-injury, and perceived burdensomeness were less likely to show an optimal pattern of treatment benefit. The findings point to heterogeneity in treatment response that may require adapting treatments for adolescents with these pretreatment profiles., Clinical Trial Registration Information: Attachment-Based Family Therapy for Suicidal Adolescents; http://clinicaltrials.gov; NCT01537419., (Copyright © 2019 American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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28. Attachment and psychopathology: a dynamic model of the insecure cycle.
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Kobak R and Bosmans G
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- Emotional Regulation, Humans, Models, Psychological, Anxiety psychology, Object Attachment
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- 2019
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29. Emotion regulation and spillover of interpersonal stressors to postsession insight among depressed and suicidal adolescents.
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Bounoua N, Abbott C, Zisk A, Herres J, Diamond G, and Kobak R
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- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Male, Problem Solving, Depression psychology, Emotions physiology, Family Therapy, Stress, Psychological psychology, Suicidal Ideation
- Abstract
Objective: Little is known about the extent to which previous weeks' stressful events spill over and influence adolescents' abilities to derive insight from treatment sessions. Even less is known about factors that moderate clients' vulnerabilities to these spillover effects. The current study examined the spillover of negative interpersonal events to postsession insight and the role of difficulties in emotion regulation in this spillover effect., Method: Participants were 129 adolescents with moderate to severe depressive symptoms and suicidal ideation (Mage = 14.96, 83% female, 56% African American/Black) participating in a comparative efficacy trial of Attachment-Based Family Therapy (ABFT) and Family-Enhanced Nondirective Supportive Therapy (FE-NST). A within-subject mediation model tested presession negative affect as a mediator of spillover of past week's events on postsession insight. We then examined baseline difficulties in emotion regulation (DERS) as a between-subjects moderator of the mediation model., Results: Negative affect partially mediated (44%) the spillover of the past week's negative events on adolescents' ratings of postsession insight (p = .03, 95% confidence interval, CI [-.09., -.002]). Baseline DERS increased adolescents' vulnerabilities to spillover effects (p = .01, 95% CI [-.28, -.03]). Negative interpersonal events from the past week influence presession negative affect and spill over to adolescents' abilities to gain insight from their treatment sessions. Adolescents who began treatment with greater DERS were particularly vulnerable to these spillover effects. Findings indicate the need for therapists to adapt sessions to individual differences in depressed and suicidal adolescents' exposure to negative interpersonal events preceding treatment and in their vulnerabilities to spillover and emotion dysregulation. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2018
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30. Evaluating referral, screening, and assessment procedures for middle school trauma/grief-focused treatment groups.
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Grassetti SN, Williamson AA, Herres J, Kobak R, Layne CM, Kaplow JB, and Pynoos RS
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- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Male, Grief, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Psychological Trauma diagnosis, Referral and Consultation, Schools, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic diagnosis, Students psychology
- Abstract
There is a need to delineate best practices for referring, assessing, and retaining students suspected of posttraumatic stress (PTS) and maladaptive grief (MG) in school-based treatment. Evidence-based risk-screening procedures should accurately include students who are appropriate for group treatment and exclude students who do not require treatment or who are better served by other forms of intervention and support. We described and evaluated the sequence of steps used to screen 7th- and 8th-grade students (N = 89) referred by school staff as candidates for an open trial of group-based Trauma and Grief Component Therapy for Adolescents (TGCTA; Saltzman et al., in press). We used t tests to compare included versus excluded students on PTS symptom and MG reaction scores (University of California at Los Angeles Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Reaction Index; Grief Screening Scale) during the group screen, individual interview, and treatment-implementation phases. Logistic regressions tested the incremental utility of including measures of both trauma exposure and related emotional and conduct problems (Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire) in the screening battery. Results suggest that the group screen helped to detect mental health needs and that the individual interview further identified students with PTS and emotional problems. Conduct problems and trauma exposure predicted attrition among students who qualified for treatment. MG incrementally predicted students who advanced from the group screening to the individual interview, and trauma exposure incrementally predicted attrition from treatment. Findings yield implications for improving research and practice, including procedures for enhancing school-based referral, screening, assessment, and selection procedures. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).)
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- 2018
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31. The Suicide Narrative Interview: adolescents' attachment expectancies and symptom severity in a clinical sample.
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Zisk A, Abbott CH, Ewing SK, Diamond GS, and Kobak R
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- Adolescent, Child, Depression psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Risk Factors, Socioeconomic Factors, Suicidal Ideation, Suicide, Attempted psychology, Caregivers psychology, Object Attachment, Suicide psychology
- Abstract
Insecure attachment styles have consistently been identified as risk factors for adolescent psychopathology and, more specifically, suicidal ideation. However, much less is known about the mechanisms that account for the relationship between attachment styles and severity of suicidal ideation within clinical samples. In the current study, adolescents' expectancies for caregiver availability and responsiveness were coded from transcripts of the Suicide Narrative Interview in a clinical sample of 129 depressed and suicidal adolescents. Results indicated that negative expectancies for caregiver availability in the Suicide Narrative Interview were associated both with attachment insecurity and with the intensity of adolescents' suicidal ideation. The implications of adolescents' expectancies for caregiver availability as targets for clinical intervention are discussed.
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- 2017
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32. Promoting Student-Teacher Interactions: Exploring a Peer Coaching Model for Teachers in a Preschool Setting.
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Johnson SR, Finlon KJ, Kobak R, and Izard CE
- Abstract
Peer coaching provides an attractive alternative to traditional professional development for promoting classroom quality in a sustainable, cost-effective manner by creating a collaborative teaching community. This exploratory study describes the development and evaluation of the Colleague Observation And CoacHing (COACH) program, a peer coaching program designed to increase teachers' effectiveness in enhancing classroom quality in a preschool Head Start setting. The COACH program consists of a training workshop on coaching skills and student-teacher interactions, six peer coaching sessions, and three center meetings. Pre-post observations of emotional support, classroom organization, and instructional support using the Classroom Assessment Scoring System of twelve classrooms assigned to peer coaching were compared to twelve control classrooms at baseline and following the intervention. Findings provide preliminary support that the peer coaching program is perceived as acceptable and feasible by the participating preschool teachers and that it may strengthen student-teacher interactions. Further program refinement and evaluation with larger samples is needed to enhance student-teacher interactions and, ultimately, children's adaptive development., Competing Interests: Compliance with Ethical Standards Conflict of interests The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.
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- 2017
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33. Adapting to the changing needs of adolescents: parenting practices and challenges to sensitive attunement.
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Kobak R, Abbott C, Zisk A, and Bounoua N
- Abstract
Changes in adolescents' motivations and capabilities pose unique challenges to parents who play a continuing role in ensuring the youth's safety and well-being. We describe sensitively attuned parenting as an optimal response to this challenge and summarize practices of positive engagement, supervision/guidance and open communication that support sensitive attunement and facilitate the continuing development of the adolescent's self-confidence, autonomous decision-making, and communication skills. We then consider factors that require parents to adapt their practices to the particular needs and developmental level of the adolescent. Individual differences that may challenge parent's effectiveness in implementing these practices include: biological vulnerabilities, differential sensitivity to parenting, relationship history and temperament. Clinical interventions that seek to improve parenting offer an opportunity to test sensitive attunement as a mechanism for reducing adolescents' symptoms and problem behaviors., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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34. Atypical dimensions of caregiver-adolescent interaction in an economically disadvantaged sample.
- Author
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Kobak R, Zajac K, Abbott C, Zisk A, and Bounoua N
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Empathy, Female, Humans, Internal-External Control, Interview, Psychological, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Personality Assessment statistics & numerical data, Psychometrics, Risk-Taking, Sex Factors, Young Adult, Parent-Child Relations, Poverty psychology, Reactive Attachment Disorder diagnosis, Reactive Attachment Disorder psychology, Social Behavior Disorders diagnosis, Social Behavior Disorders psychology, Vulnerable Populations psychology
- Abstract
The Goal-Corrected Partnership Adolescent Coding System (GPACS) has shown promise in assessing a secure as well as three atypical patterns of parent-adolescent interaction during a conflict discussion. The current study of 186 economically disadvantaged families examines the degree to which four GPACS patterns: secure/collaborative, hostile/punitive, role confused, and disoriented, prospectively predict adolescents' social competence and maladaptive behavior (internalizing, externalizing, and risk behaviors) at age 15 years after controlling for these social behaviors at age 13 years and contemporaneous GPACS scores. Adolescents from secure/collaborative dyads at age 13 were more likely to have a secure state of mind in the Adult Attachment Interview at age 15 and showed higher levels of teachers' ratings of empathy and lower levels of teachers' ratings of externalizing behaviors at age 15 years. Adolescents in disoriented dyads showed higher levels of teacher-rated internalizing problems, while male adolescents in role confused dyads reported higher levels of involvement in risk behaviors, including unprotected sexual activity and substance use problems.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Emotional Reactivity to Negative Adult and Peer Events and the Maintenance of Adolescent Depressive Symptoms: a Daily Diary Design.
- Author
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Herres J, Ewing ES, and Kobak R
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Models, Psychological, Sex Factors, Depression psychology, Emotions physiology, Interpersonal Relations, Peer Group, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Abstract
Emotional reactivity to negative interpersonal events has been consistently linked with depressive symptoms in studies with adults. However, little is known about the role that emotional reactivity plays in the maintenance of depressive symptoms during adolescence. A structured diary, administered to 132 economically disadvantaged adolescents (53% female, 76% African American) at age 14, measured adolescent daily reports of negative events involving parents, teachers, and peers and ratings of negative and positive affect. We examined the relationship between emotional reactivity (changes in negative and positive affect that correspond with negative events) and the maintenance of depressive symptoms between ages 13 and 15. We also tested unique effects of different types of emotional reactivity, depending on the type of interpersonal event. Results provided support for the emotional reactivity model for negative teacher events: heightened reactivity to negative teacher events was related to the maintenance of depressive symptoms. Findings suggest that adolescents' emotional reactivity to teachers has important implications for the continuity of depressive symptoms during early adolescence for disadvantaged youth.
- Published
- 2016
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36. Attachment-Based Family Therapy With a 13-Year-Old Girl Presenting With High Risk for Suicide.
- Author
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Krauthamer Ewing ES, Levy SA, Boamah-Wiafe L, Kobak R, and Diamond G
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Suicidal Ideation, Depression psychology, Family Therapy methods, Object Attachment, Suicide Prevention
- Abstract
This article describes the application of Attachment-Based Family Therapy (ABFT) to the treatment of a 13-year-old female adolescent presenting with high risk of suicide, complicated by a history of depression and sexual trauma. The article begins with an overview of ABFT, including (a) how attachment theory guides treatment; (b) the structure of the clinical model; and (c) the data that provide empirical support. A case example is then presented that exemplifies the primary clinical procedures used to reach therapeutic goals in ABFT, including attachment repair and autonomy/competence promotion. Weekly changes in suicide ideation and depression scores are presented. The article concludes with a discussion about implications for family-based treatment of suicidal youth., (© 2015 American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy.)
- Published
- 2016
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37. The role of parent, teacher, and peer events in maintaining depressive symptoms during early adolescence.
- Author
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Herres J and Kobak R
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Cohort Studies, Female, Hope, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Male, Models, Psychological, Negativism, Parent-Child Relations, Self Concept, Sex Factors, Stress, Psychological psychology, Depression psychology, Faculty, Parents psychology, Peer Group, Role
- Abstract
Negative interpersonal events have been consistently identified as both antecedents and sequalae of adolescent depressive symptoms. However, little is known about the relative contributions of specific domains of interpersonal events (parents, peers or teachers) to the maintenance of depressive symptoms during early adolescence or whether a lack of positive interpersonal interactions plays a direct role in maintaining depressive symptoms. Further, few studies have examined whether positive interpersonal events moderate associations between negative events and adolescents' depressive symptoms. This study combined stress generation and exposure models to evaluate the contribution of daily events to the maintenance of depressive symptoms in a sample of 132 adolescents (53 % female) followed from ages 13 to 15. Daily phone diaries collected at age 14 assessed adolescents' negative and positive interactions with parents, teachers, and peers in a sample of adolescents from economically disadvantaged families. Negative peer events uniquely accounted for the maintenance of depressive symptoms over the 2 years period. Results did not differ by gender; however, positive parent events buffered the effects of negative parent events for females but not for males. Findings highlight the significance of peer relationships during a period of vulnerability for depressive symptoms.
- Published
- 2015
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38. Attachment based treatments for adolescents: the secure cycle as a framework for assessment, treatment and evaluation.
- Author
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Kobak R, Zajac K, Herres J, and Krauthamer Ewing ES
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adolescent Development, Communication, Emotions, Humans, Models, Psychological, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting, Self Concept, Caregivers psychology, Object Attachment, Psychology, Adolescent methods
- Abstract
The emergence of attachment-based treatments (ABTs) for adolescents highlights the need to more clearly define and evaluate these treatments in the context of other attachment based treatments for young children and adults. We propose a general framework for defining and evaluating ABTs that describes the cyclical processes that are required to maintain a secure attachment bond. This secure cycle incorporates three components: (1) the child or adult's IWM of the caregiver; (2) emotionally attuned communication; and (3) the caregiver's IWM of the child or adult. We briefly review Bowlby, Ainsworth, and Main's contributions to defining the components of the secure cycle and discuss how this framework can be adapted for understanding the process of change in ABTs. For clinicians working with adolescents, our model can be used to identify how deviations from the secure cycle (attachment injuries, empathic failures and mistuned communication) contribute to family distress and psychopathology. The secure cycle also provides a way of describing the ABT elements that have been used to revise IWMs or improve emotionally attuned communication. For researchers, our model provides a guide for conceptualizing and measuring change in attachment constructs and how change in one component of the interpersonal cycle should generalize to other components.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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39. Narrative Focus Predicts Symptom Change Trajectories in Group Treatment for Traumatized and Bereaved Adolescents.
- Author
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Grassetti SN, Herres J, Williamson AA, Yarger HA, Layne CM, and Kobak R
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Grief, Humans, Male, Pilot Projects, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic psychology, Treatment Outcome, Bereavement, Narrative Therapy methods, Psychotherapy, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic therapy
- Abstract
Growing evidence supports the effectiveness of Trauma and Grief Component Therapy for Adolescents (TGCT-A) in reducing posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms and maladaptive grief (MG) reactions. This pilot study explored whether the specific focus of students' narratives (i.e., focus on trauma vs. focus on loss) as shared by TGCT-A group members would predict initial pretreatment levels, as well as pre- to posttreatment change trajectories, of PTSD symptoms and MG reactions. Thirty-three adolescents from three middle schools completed a 17-week course of group-based TGCT-A. PTSD and MG symptoms were assessed at pretreatment, twice during treatment, and at posttreatment. The focus (trauma vs. loss) of each student's narrative was coded using transcripts of members' narratives as shared within the groups. The reliable change index showed that 61% of students reported reliable pre-post improvement in either PTSD symptoms or MG reactions. Students whose narratives focused on loss both reported higher starting levels and showed steeper rates of decline in MG reactions than students whose narratives focused on trauma. In contrast, students whose narratives focused on trauma reported higher starting levels of PTSD than students who narrated loss experiences. However, narrative focus was not significantly linked to the rate at which PTSD symptoms declined over the course of treatment. This study provides preliminary evidence that TGCT-A treatment components are associated with reduced PTSD symptoms and MG reactions. Loss-focused narratives, in particular, appear to be associated with greater decreases in MG reactions.
- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
40. Consensus statement on group care for children and adolescents: A statement of policy of the American Orthopsychiatric Association.
- Author
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Dozier M, Kaufman J, Kobak R, O'Connor TG, Sagi-Schwartz A, Scott S, Shauffer C, Smetana J, van IJzendoorn MH, and Zeanah CH
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Consensus, Humans, Object Attachment, Policy, Child Rearing psychology, Family psychology, Group Homes standards, Orthopsychiatry standards
- Abstract
Group care for children and adolescents is widely used as a rearing environment and sometimes used as a setting in which intensive services can be provided. This consensus statement on group care affirms that children and adolescents have the need and right to grow up in a family with at least 1 committed, stable, and loving adult caregiver. In principle, group care should never be favored over family care. Group care should be used only when it is the least detrimental alternative, when necessary therapeutic mental health services cannot be delivered in a less restrictive setting., (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2014 APA, all rights reserved)
- Published
- 2014
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41. Teacher-student interactions and attachment states of mind as predictors of early romantic involvement and risky sexual behaviors.
- Author
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Kobak R, Herres J, Gaskins C, and Laurenceau JP
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adolescent Behavior, Age Factors, Chi-Square Distribution, Child, Female, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Psychology, Child, Psychometrics, Risk Factors, Sex Factors, Time Factors, Faculty, Love, Object Attachment, Risk-Taking, Sexuality psychology, Students psychology
- Abstract
Adolescents' capacities to negotiate sexual behavior in romantic relationships have important implications for their reproductive and health outcomes. This study examined adolescents' interactions with teachers and attachment states of mind as predictors of their romantic involvement and risky sexual behavior in an economically disadvantaged sample. Negative interactions with teachers predicted increased sexual risk-taking behaviors and females' early romantic involvement. Preoccupied states of mind increased risk for early romantic involvement and the likelihood that females would engage in risky sexual behavior. The findings demonstrate how adolescents' school experiences contribute to adaptation in romantic relationships in mid to late adolescence above and beyond representations of parent-child attachment.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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42. Assessing Adolescents' Attachment Hierarchies: Differences Across Developmental Periods and Associations With Individual Adaptation.
- Author
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Rosenthal NL and Kobak R
- Abstract
Adolescents' attachment hierarchies were assessed in a sample of 212 high school and 198 college students. The Important People Interview (IPI) differentiated attachment bonds from other supportive or affiliative relationships and indicated that adolescents show a hierarchical ordering of preferences for multiple attachment figures. Differences in the composition and structure of adolescents' attachment hierarchies were found between the early high school (9(th) and 10(th) grades), later high school (11(th) and 12(th) grades), and college samples. In the college sample, romantic partners were placed in higher positions in adolescents' hierarchies, fathers were placed in lower positions, and the structure of adolescents' hierarchies were less differentiated than in the high school samples. Individual differences in the composition of adolescents' hierarchies were associated with adjustment outcomes. Friends' placement in higher positions and fathers' exclusion from or placement in quaternary positions was associated with increased behavior problems. Findings demonstrate that the IPI provides a measure of adolescents' attachment hierarchies that is sensitive to developmental stage and individual differences.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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43. Caregiver unresolved loss and abuse and child behavior problems: intergenerational effects in a high-risk sample.
- Author
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Zajac K and Kobak R
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Depression epidemiology, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Predictive Value of Tests, Psychology, Adolescent, Psychology, Child, Reactive Attachment Disorder epidemiology, Risk Assessment, Young Adult, Caregivers psychology, Child Abuse statistics & numerical data, Child Behavior Disorders epidemiology
- Abstract
This study examines the intergenerational effects of caregivers' unresolved loss and abuse on children's behavior problems from middle childhood to early adolescence in an economically disadvantaged sample. One hundred twenty-four caregivers completed the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI) and a lifetime trauma interview during the age 13 wave of the study. Child behavior problems were assessed at four time points (ages 6, 8, 10, and 13) with teacher-reported Child Behavior Checklist total problem scales. The children of insecure caregivers with unresolved loss showed a consistent pattern of increased behavior problems from middle childhood to early adolescence. Caregivers' AAI status accounted for more variance in child behavior problems than did an alternative model of caregiver psychopathology (depression and dissociation). The results extend the literature on the effects of caregiver unresolved states of mind beyond infancy to older children and adolescents.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Adolescent attachment and trajectories of hostile-impulsive behavior: implications for the development of personality disorders.
- Author
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Kobak R, Zajac K, and Smith C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Aggression, Aging physiology, Aging psychology, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Female, Humans, Impulsive Behavior psychology, Male, Sex Characteristics, Adolescent Behavior physiology, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Hostility, Impulsive Behavior etiology
- Abstract
Adolescents' trajectories of impulsive and hostile behaviors provide a dynamic index of risk for the emergence of Cluster B (antisocial and borderline) personality disorders in early adulthood. In the current study, we tested the hypothesis that preoccupied states of mind in the Adult Attachment Interview would increase both the level and rate of growth in adolescents' trajectories of aggressive and sexual risk-taking behaviors measured at ages 13, 15, and 17. Overall, preoccupied states of mind predicted higher levels of sexual risk taking and aggressive behaviors across all three assessments as well as higher rates of growth in sexual-risk taking and caregiver-reported aggression over time. In addition, preoccupied females showed slower rates of decline in self-reported hostile emotions than did preoccupied males. The effects of gender as a moderator of the relations between preoccupied status and risk trajectories for personality disorders are discussed.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Cortisol and antisocial behavior in early adolescence: the role of gender in an economically disadvantaged sample.
- Author
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Kobak R, Zajac K, and Levine S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Age Factors, Caregivers, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Risk Factors, Saliva metabolism, Sex Factors, Task Performance and Analysis, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Antisocial Personality Disorder metabolism, Antisocial Personality Disorder psychology, Conflict, Psychological, Hydrocortisone metabolism, Psychomotor Performance
- Abstract
This study examines the relation between adolescents' antisocial behaviors and adrenocortical activity during a laboratory visit in a sample of economically disadvantaged families (N = 116, ages 12-14, 51% female). Pretask cortisol levels indexed adolescents' prechallenge response to the lab visit, whereas adolescents' response to a conflict discussion with their caregivers was indexed with residualized change in pre- to postconflict cortisol levels. A trait measure of antisocial behavior (derived from parent, teacher, and self-reports) was associated with lower pretask cortisol levels but greater cortisol response to the conflict discussion. Gender moderated antisocial adolescents' cortisol response to the conflict discussion with girls who reported more covert risky problem behaviors showing an increased cortisol response. The findings suggest that, although antisocial adolescents had lower pretask cortisol levels, conflict discussions with caregivers present a unique challenge to antisocial girls compared with antisocial boys.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Adolescent attachment hierarchies and the search for an adult pair-bond.
- Author
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Kobak R, Rosenthal NL, Zajac K, and Madsen SD
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Forecasting, Humans, Interview, Psychological, Male, Parent-Child Relations, Peer Group, Puberty, Adolescent Behavior, Adolescent Development, Object Attachment
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Relation between reading problems and internalizing behavior in school for preadolescent children from economically disadvantaged families.
- Author
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Ackerman BP, Izard CE, Kobak R, Brown ED, and Smith C
- Subjects
- Affective Symptoms diagnosis, Affective Symptoms ethnology, Affective Symptoms psychology, Black People psychology, Child, Child Behavior Disorders diagnosis, Child Behavior Disorders ethnology, Dyslexia diagnosis, Dyslexia ethnology, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Personality Assessment, Risk Factors, White People psychology, Child Behavior Disorders psychology, Dyslexia psychology, Internal-External Control, Psychosocial Deprivation
- Abstract
This longitudinal study of 105 economically disadvantaged children examined the relation between reading problems and internalizing behavior in 3rd- and 5th-grade assessments (8- to 12-year olds). The variable-centered results showed that reading problems predicted change in internalizing behavior in the context of child and family predictors. The person-centered results showed that children with reading problems in both grades had higher internalizing scores in 5th grade but not in 3rd grade than children with reading problems in 3rd grade or no problems. Child-reported negative emotion experiences varied similarly across grade. The results tie reading problems to emotional distress in school and support conclusions about the direction of effects and the internalization of academic difficulty for disadvantaged children.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Aggression and self-esteem: a diary study of children's reactivity to negative interpersonal events.
- Author
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Esposito AJ, Kobak R, and Little M
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Data Collection, Humans, Peer Group, Personality classification, Sociometric Techniques, Aggression psychology, Child Behavior psychology, Interpersonal Relations, Life Change Events, Self Concept
- Abstract
The study employs a daily diary design to assess self-esteem reactivity and its association with children's aggressive behavior. We test the hypothesis that the self-esteem of aggressive children will be more reactive to negative interpersonal events than the self-esteem of nonaggressive children. Results provide partial support for the aggression/reactivity hypothesis. Aggressive children's self-esteem was more reactive to negative peer events but less reactive to negative adult events than the self-esteem of less aggressive children. These findings are discussed in relation to the experimental literature relating self-esteem instability and ego-threat to aggression and in relation to the extensive body of research on childhood aggression. Intervention implications are also considered.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Emotional security with teachers and children's stress reactivity: a comparison of special-education and regular-education classrooms.
- Author
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Little M and Kobak R
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Mother-Child Relations, Education, Special, Emotions, Peer Group, Self Concept
- Abstract
Examined children's exposure and reactivity to negative peer and teacher events in special-education and regular-education classrooms. Participants were 40 children in regular classrooms and 20 children classified as seriously emotionally disturbed (SED) in special-education classrooms. Children completed 7 days of diary data over the course of the school year. SED children reported higher rates of exposure to negative teacher and peer events than comparison children. The self-esteem of both SED and comparison children was reactive to negative peer events in the classroom, but emotional security with teacher (EST) reduced this reactivity. The self-esteem of SED children was also reactive to negative teacher events but, EST, once again, reduced reactivity to negative events. Finally, SED children's perception of maternal warmth moderated their self-esteem reactivity and was concordant with their views of teachers. Results are discussed in light of treatment implications for SED children.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Building bridges between social, developmental and clinical psychology.
- Author
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Kobak R
- Subjects
- Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Models, Psychological, Object Attachment, Personality Development, Psychology, Clinical methods, Psychology, Social methods
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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