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      Maternal sensitivity, its relationship with child outcomes, and interventions that address it: a systematic literature review

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      Early Child Development and Care
      Informa UK Limited

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          Sensitivity and Attachment: A Meta-Analysis on Parental Antecedents of Infant Attachment

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            Less is more: Meta-analyses of sensitivity and attachment interventions in early childhood.

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              From external regulation to self-regulation: early parenting precursors of young children's executive functioning.

              In keeping with proposals emphasizing the role of early experience in infant brain development, this study investigated the prospective links between quality of parent-infant interactions and subsequent child executive functioning (EF), including working memory, impulse control, and set shifting. Maternal sensitivity, mind-mindedness and autonomy support were assessed when children were 12 to 15 months old (N = 80). Child EF was assessed at 18 and 26 months. All three parenting dimensions were found to relate to child EF. Autonomy support was the strongest predictor of EF at each age, independent of general cognitive ability and maternal education. These findings add to previous results on child stress-response systems in suggesting that parent-child relationships may play an important role in children's developing self-regulatory capacities.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Early Child Development and Care
                Early Child Development and Care
                Informa UK Limited
                0300-4430
                1476-8275
                January 25 2020
                April 23 2018
                January 25 2020
                : 190
                : 2
                : 252-275
                Affiliations
                [1 ] College of Health & Biomedicine, Victoria University, Melbourne, Australia
                Article
                10.1080/03004430.2018.1465415
                fa423451-d77b-4607-a317-a26dd2c82950
                © 2020
                History

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