We address our research questions using data from 690 parent - child
dyads participating in three waves of the Longitudinal Study of Generations.
One - hundred - twenty (N = 120) parent and child
dyads participated in a home visit study in which they talked about narrative and informational texts.
After this screening process, children completed the James / Dylan task, parents completed the BASC - 2, and
the dyads participated in the Emotion Discussion Task, which formed the basis for the behavior co-regulation coding.
Not exact matches
Married individuals (not marital
dyads) were recruited online to
participate in an online survey about their financial communication patterns within his or her marriage.
Study participants were mother - child
dyads who had been screened as part of the Thinking Healthy Programme (THP) randomised controlled trial.3 Of 705
participating mother — child
dyads interviewed at the end of the THP study, 584 (83 %)
dyads were enrolled.
Importantly, rates of security in the mother - child
dyads that received the attachment - theory informed intervention did not differ from those present in the
dyads where mothers were not depressed.5 For toddlers who
participated in the attachment intervention, there was also a greater maintenance of secure attachment organization among those who were initially secure, as well as a greater shift from insecure to secure attachment groupings.
Members of the baseline sample were randomly chosen to be interviewed as either the sole reporter on their marriage (n = 686) or as part of a marital
dyad where each would independently
participate in the CLOC interview (n = 846 persons or 423 couples).
Methods A sample of 250 parent — child
dyads from a longitudinal intergenerational research program
participated.
In the present study, we did not assess how often the
participating friendship
dyads normally (i.e., outside of the peer interaction task) talked about sexuality - related topics.
This resulted in 31 male and 30 female
participating friendship
dyads.
Five hundred nineteen adolescent - parent
dyads (39 % of eligible students)
participated in this study.
Thirty - nine mother — preadolescent child
dyads from a non-clinical population
participated in the study.
More than half of the
participating dyads constructed secure attachments.
Of the original sample that consented to
participate, 88
dyads (44 %) had to be excluded due to missing data (refusing to be videotaped, not showing up at the research appointment, or not filling in some of the questionnaires).
Within the 82
participating mother - child
dyads, 21 mothers were currently depressed, 29 mothers had a lifetime history of depression but were in remission for at least 1 month, and 32 mothers had never been clinically depressed.