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Research Project
William James Center for Research
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Publications
Direct and indirect relations between parent–child attachments, peer acceptance, and self-esteem for preschool children
Publication . Pinto, Alexandra Maria Pereira Inácio Sequeira; Veríssimo, Manuela; Gatinho, Ana Rita dos Santos; Santos, António José; Vaughn, Brian E.
The present study aims to test Bowlby's suggestions concerning relations between the child's attachment quality with parents and subsequently constructed models of self-worth during early childhood. In most research on this question, attachment with mothers is considered in relation to self-worth but the child's attachment with fathers is not. Neither has the peer group been studied as an influence on child self-esteem, in the context of attachment research. This study addresses these relatively unstudied influences on child self-esteem. Attachment security to mother and father was measured by the Attachment Behavior Q-Set at two and half years of age. At five years of age social acceptance was measured using two sociometric techniques, and the self-esteem with the California Child Q-Sort. Our analyses indicated that security of the attachment to father and peer acceptance are both unique, significant predictors of the childrens' self-esteem. The security of the attachment to mother was also related to child self-esteem but did not emerge as a uniquely significant predictor. Peer acceptance appeared to moderate of the effect of the security of the attachment to father on the self-esteem of children. Our results extend the relatively sparse literature relating early attachments to self-esteem during early childhood.
Affiliative subgroups in preschool classrooms: Integrating constructs and methods from social ethology and sociometric traditions
Publication . Santos, António José; Daniel, João Rodrigo; Fernandes, Carla; Vaughn, Brian E.
Recent studies of school-age children and adolescents have used social network analyses
to characterize selection and socialization aspects of peer groups. Fewer network studies
have been reported for preschool classrooms and many of those have focused on structural
descriptions of peer networks, and/or, on selection processes rather than on social functions
of subgroup membership. In this study we started by identifying and describing different
types of affiliative subgroups (HMP- high mutual proximity, LMP- low mutual proximity,
and ungrouped children) in a sample of 240 Portuguese preschool children using nearest
neighbor observations. Next, we used additional behavioral observations and sociometric
data to show that HMP and LMP subgroups are functionally distinct: HMP subgroups
appear to reflect friendship relations, whereas LMP subgroups appear to reflect common
social goals, but without strong, within-subgroup dyadic ties. Finally, we examined the longitudinal
implications of subgroup membership and show that children classified as HMP in
consecutive years had more reciprocated friendships than did children whose subgroup
classification changed from LMP or ungrouped to HMP. These results extend previous findings
reported for North American peer groups.
Network dynamics of affiliative ties in preschool peer groups
Publication . Daniel, João Rodrigo; Santos, Antonio José; Fernandes, Carla; Vaughn, Brian E.
This study investigated the network dynamics of affiliative ties in Portuguese preschool children, over three
consecutive school years, using stochastic actor-based models. Our first goal was to test the extent to which
different criteria to identify ties from observational data lead to different theoretical interpretations of model
estimates. Contrary to past observational studies the data we use here takes into account the identities of
children responsible for initiating social interactions. The second goal was to test the influence of two interaction
effects involving reciprocity to analyze if reciprocity is constrained by the presence of transitive ties and if it
constrains the creation and maintenance of new unreciprocated ties. Results showed that most effects were
robust to changes in criteria to operationalize ties, supporting previous descriptions of preschool network dynamics.
Also, contrary to recent findings in older samples, being embedded in a transitive triad did not make an
unreciprocated dyad more likely to be maintained. Finally, results showed that the existence of reciprocal ties
decreased preschool children’s tendency to create new ties.
Estados de menopausa: Relação entre sintomas, auto-Imagem, satisfação sexual e relacional
Publication . Rosas, Raquel; Pimenta, Filipa; Costa, Pedro; Marôco, João Pauko; Leal, Isabel
Inexistente
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Funding agency
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
Funding programme
6817 - DCRRNI ID
Funding Award Number
UID/PSI/04810/2013