コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)
通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 ate neuropeptides to study in the context of parenting.
2 ex social behavior, particularly empathy and parenting.
3 une with the infant state, and plan adequate parenting.
4 tical circuits, associated with oxytocin and parenting.
5 among adolescent women who were pregnant and parenting.
6 l health of adolescents who are pregnant and parenting.
7 cts of the Great Recession on maternal harsh parenting.
8 h status of adolescents who are pregnant and parenting.
9 in depression and is implicated in birth and parenting.
10 ncluding pair formation, mating behavior and parenting.
11 so ameliorate the biological effects of poor parenting.
12 on neural circuitry not directly involved in parenting.
13 ion, or teenaged mother) and harsh, reactive parenting.
14 f conduct disorder and affect the quality of parenting.
15 ry trade-offs between mating/competition and parenting.
16 oles in predicted behavioural precursors for parenting.
17 Families in SSLP areas showed less negative parenting (-0.90, -1.11 to -0.69, p<0.0001) and provided
18 -four adolescent women who were pregnant and parenting, 14-18 years of age, who read and spoke Englis
21 Maternal eating disorders interfere with parenting, adversely affecting mother-infant interaction
22 rthermore, animal studies suggest that harsh parenting affects the expression of genes by epigenetic
23 ision and movie viewing, video-game playing, parenting, age, sex, race or ethnicity, household income
24 linical trial designed to enhance supportive parenting ameliorated the association of years lived in
25 is well known that children need solicitous parenting and a nurturing rearing environment to ensure
26 would correlate with frequencies of observed parenting and affiliative behaviors between partners.
27 are an effective option to promote positive parenting and discipline strategies and enhance a child'
33 that the Family Spirit intervention improves parenting and infant outcomes that predict lower lifetim
34 on depressive behavior and demonstrate that parenting and mating experiences shape these effects.
35 that are delivered to individuals as well as parenting and school interventions, and broader socioeco
36 ed intervention in prekindergarten, improves parenting and school readiness (ie, self-regulation and
39 nsistent with a possible role for supportive parenting and suggest a strategy for narrowing social di
40 targets of selection during the evolution of parenting and suggests additional candidate neuropeptide
41 uch more about the biological impact of poor parenting and the need for interventions that are crafte
42 to manage stress have clear implications for parenting and the social-emotional well-being of their y
44 ntelligence, stresses, and social support in parenting) and the home environment [HOME (Home Observat
45 scent outcomes and environmental moderators (parenting), and a latent variable behavior genetic analy
46 pecifically activated during male and female parenting, and a different subpopulation that is activat
49 to the mother (from age 0 to 4 years), harsh parenting, and higher levels of child undercontrolled te
50 g youth who received more nurturant-involved parenting, and less harsh-inconsistent parenting, as a c
52 he stress and stimulation of different work, parenting, and partnership combinations might influence
53 of resilience, including emotion regulation, parenting, and social support, for children who are expo
56 nts' overarching attitudes and approaches to parenting appear to be associated with their feeding pra
58 he intergenerational transmission of abusive parenting are mediated by social learning or experience-
62 cacy, and reduction in barriers to effective parenting; (b) through program-induced reductions in sho
64 stimuli using functional MRI, oxytocin, and parenting behavior in three groups of parents (n = 89) r
66 n the presubiculum supports pair bonding and parenting behavior, potentially by mediating changes in
73 r salivary OT, RSA during free play, and key parenting behaviors that support parental-infant bonding
76 ng pregnancy reported engaging in more harsh parenting behaviors when their children were toddlers (b
78 own that early life experience, particularly parenting behaviors, influences later-life stress reacti
84 unisation videos were observed and coded for parenting behaviours as well as pain promoting and pain
85 years of research have established both that parenting behaviours influence the development of childh
87 nteractions, and early environment including parenting characteristics has been associated with CU tr
88 cross the first decade of life, and assessed parenting, child temperament, and anxiety disorders as c
89 Several recent intervention studies with a parenting component demonstrated immediate and long-term
91 revent disruptive behavior problems, address parenting concerns, and nurture the optimal development
94 intervention focused on enhancing supportive parenting could ameliorate the association between expos
98 aken for granted and often unseen aspects of parenting during childhood cancer treatment constituted
99 risk factor for child maltreatment and harsh parenting during their children's first and second years
100 causation-good childhood outcomes that make parenting easier-also remain a concern in many previous
104 the benefits derived from mating effort and parenting effort may change over the course of males' li
105 ecting the trade-off between male mating and parenting effort suggests different possibilities for us
106 Thus, males might derive more benefits from parenting effort than mating effort as they age and thei
107 flects a trade-off between mating effort and parenting effort, as indexed by testicular size and nurt
108 t by positing a trade-off between mating and parenting effort, which may explain some of the observed
109 s in relation to OT-pathway genes, including parenting, empathy, and using social relationships to ma
110 houghts and behaviors required for sensitive parenting enables the formation of each individual's fir
114 the link between positive mental health and parenting, focusing on oxytocin-dopamine interactions.
115 ntion program designed to enhance supportive parenting for rural African American children will ameli
120 omparative research into the neurobiology of parenting, here I chart a global 'parental caregiving' n
124 ention and on the central role of successful parenting in child development, we developed and rigorou
125 etween adoptive and birth family members, co-parenting in gay and lesbian adoptive families, and raci
126 that T mediates tradeoffs between mating and parenting in humans, as seen in other species in which f
127 ng experiment to investigate whether abusive parenting in rhesus macaques is transmitted from mothers
130 with later-evolving networks and implicates parenting in the evolution of higher order social functi
131 alytic methods, that a continuous measure of parenting in the normative range moderates the influence
133 the associations between multiple aspects of parenting (including parent-child relationship satisfact
135 s for childhood obesity, effects of specific parenting influences, such as parental media monitoring,
136 of needed services and appropriate health or parenting information, creates opportunities for parents
137 aimed to test the causal impact of an early parenting intervention (Attachment and Biobehavioral Cat
139 ed randomised trials of the Incredible Years parenting intervention in Europe that included children
141 esearch has identified the factors that make parenting interventions effective and how to engage the
142 to be effective but the potential effects of parenting interventions on social inequality are unknown
147 w such flexibility affects the ways in which parenting is adapted and evolves in response to environm
148 ional behaviors and compelling evidence that parenting is an important nonheritable factor in the dev
149 here females care exclusively for offspring, parenting is associated with suppressed hippocampal adul
151 intervention group had significantly greater parenting knowledge (effect size=0.42) and parental locu
152 intervention group had significantly greater parenting knowledge parenting self-efficacy, and home sa
153 were not randomised, included additional non-parenting material (eg, child-focused interventions), or
154 mes simultaneously, over multiple aspects of parenting, may provide a more holistic picture of the pa
155 nt the first evidence that positive maternal parenting might ameliorate the negative effects of socio
157 Observational studies suggest that nurturant parenting might offset some of these health risks, but t
160 ed children scored higher on positive Mellow Parenting Observational System behaviours, but not at a
161 tions signal risk for maltreatment and harsh parenting of her child during the first years of life.
162 of later outcomes for children, and abusive parenting of young children has lasting biological effec
165 s of the positive effect of early supportive parenting on healthy hippocampal development, a brain re
166 ate 2010 onwards that address the effects of parenting on the child's physiological and genetic syste
167 ates: solitary virgins, individuals actively parenting or post-parenting solitary adults and quantify
168 d TBI and OI [difference = 37.78; P < .001]) parenting or with fewer home resources (mean CAFAS of 69
169 onal, or sexual abuse, or severe maladaptive parenting (or both) between ages 8 weeks and 8.6 years,
170 n,in improving American Indian teen mothers' parenting outcomes and mothers'and children's emotional
172 INSPIRE-aligned protective factors (positive parenting, parental monitoring and supervision, food sec
173 ntified, including the assessment of refined parenting phenotypes, cultural tailoring of intervention
175 vations provided evidence of improvements in parenting practices and child disruptive behaviors that
176 Studies have consistently reported that parenting practices have an impact on eating styles whic
178 s no study that evaluates the association of parenting practices on gingivitis in children using path
180 enting (representing coercive or controlling parenting practices) had a negative effect on oral hygie
181 maternal age at birth and family breakdown, parenting practices, and family socioeconomic status.
184 minants of PAC feeding and physical activity parenting practices, the results of which may inform new
187 es during infancy as well as early sensitive parenting predict the subsequent development of CU trait
190 ediatricians can easily incorporate positive parenting principles into primary-care visits and develo
191 t of a randomized clinical trial of an early parenting program, the Attachment and Biobehavioral Catc
193 Of 15 European trials of Incredible Years parenting programmes (n=1696 children), individual parti
194 expression of genes by epigenetic processes.Parenting programmes are effective in increasing the sec
198 earch on the long-term effects of preventive parenting programs: (a) through program effects on paren
202 s that are potentially modifiable, including parenting quality, social (including partner) and materi
203 relationships with siblings, the quality of parenting received in childhood, and family history of d
204 ome-visiting intervention promoted effective parenting, reduced maternal risks, and improved child de
205 tion was partially mediated by nonsupportive parenting, reducing by 21% the effect of preschool condu
207 g for an infant, or past deficiencies in own parenting relationship and act as a biomarker for poor p
211 with concerns regarding balancing career and parenting responsibilities often cited as a contributing
212 independence (OR, 3.41; 95% CI, 2.57-4.52), parenting responsibility (OR, 18.65; 95% CI, 12.29-28.30
214 egative social behaviours, and independence; parenting risk; home-learning environment; father's invo
217 hy Trajectories (INSIGHT) study's responsive parenting (RP) intervention, initiated in early infancy,
218 es between groups on self-reported levels of parenting satisfaction (difference estimate 0.21, 95% CI
219 ome), other CBCL/1.5-5 scales and subscores, Parenting Scale, Inventory of Callous-Unemotional Traits
220 ad significantly greater parenting knowledge parenting self-efficacy, and home safety attitudes and f
225 dhood preventive interventions should target parenting skills and child behaviors, particularly withi
226 lth workers over a 2-year period that taught parenting skills and encouraged mothers and children to
228 ural family interventions targeting specific parenting skills are the most effective way of preventin
229 s, including control clusters, had access to parenting skills classes and received maize seed and fer
230 ing programs: (a) through program effects on parenting skills, perceptions of parental efficacy, and
231 Both interventions significantly improved parenting skills, with responsive stimulation showing la
232 sexual violence, childhood trauma, and harsh parenting (smacking their children as a form of discipli
233 ators of maltreatment or other family (e.g., parenting, sociodemographic) hardships; MAOA genotype; i
234 gins, individuals actively parenting or post-parenting solitary adults and quantify 133 peptides belo
235 ng holds implications for the role of the co-parenting spouse in influencing social and parental brai
236 study, we examined how the presence of a co-parenting spouse influences brain-to-brain synchrony whe
237 e influence of the physical presence of a co-parenting spouse on parental brain responses remains lar
240 drinking over time were not differential by parenting status for women; rather, declines and increas
242 binge and heavy drinking; men, regardless of parenting status, and women without children consumed mo
243 vidence of interaction in drinking trends by parenting status, but this was shown to be confounded by
246 has been shown to be effective in improving parenting strategies and reducing children's disruptive
247 ing the strength of evidence that particular parenting strategies can leverage behavior change and re
248 acks conclusive evidence that one particular parenting strategy or approach causally is superior to o
249 psychosocial intervention, focused improving parenting, strengthening family relationships, and build
252 However, it has yet to be discerned whether parenting stress affects brain-to-brain synchrony during
253 The positive effects of PSE in reducing parenting stress and depressive symptoms during the crit
255 other behavioural problems, quality of life, parenting stress and sleeping problems were compared bet
258 ture investigations into mechanisms by which parenting stress impairs the mother-child relationship.
262 ur result demonstrates the adverse effect of parenting stress on mother-child attunement that is evid
264 ross the domains: 1) serious life events, 2) parenting stress, 3) lack of social support, and 4) pare
265 ology groups differed on child maltreatment, parenting stress, and children's exposure to traumatic e
266 ood to alleviate psychological difficulties, parenting stress, and especially pain, are justified for
267 ative glucocorticoid levels (hair cortisol), parenting stress, and performance on memory tasks known
268 Probable maternal depression and/or PTSD, parenting stress, child exposure to traumatic events, an
270 ed the effects of early exposure to variable parenting style and infant abuse on cerebrospinal fluid
275 the family system; 2) shared environment; 3) parenting style; 4) caregiver perceptions; and 5) genomi
280 low to moderate evidence for the benefits of parenting support programmes delivered by nurses on a ra
283 teacher or student violence), free schools, parenting support, free school meals, and support groups
286 ors compared changes in the mental health of parenting teenagers and nonparenting teenagers over 6 ye
287 ic conditions had a stronger impact on harsh parenting than improvements in conditions, and that moth
289 comes and potentially with specific forms of parenting that promote both academic achievement and soc
290 ther than current conditions, affected harsh parenting, that declines in macroeconomic conditions had
291 dence for a public health focus on improving parenting to promote population health and well-being.
292 review briefly discusses the contribution of parenting to the development of child mental health diff
293 ive functioning in parents preparing for and parenting toddlers influences the parent-child attachmen
295 Mediation analyses suggested that improved parenting was partially responsible for the intervention
296 nd pressure to eat, the relation from BMI to parenting was stronger than the reverse (Wald's test for
298 oevolution of flexible behaviors involved in parenting, which could, paradoxically, constrain the abi
299 nality disorder (PD), but the association of parenting with offspring PD has not been investigated co
300 hers or by foster mothers, exhibited abusive parenting with their firstborn offspring, whereas none o