Results 251 to 260 of about 331,057 (285)
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Non-Emerging Adulthood

2021
This book offers a therapeutic approach to a problem that many families and mental health institutions face: a growing number of adult children who struggle to progress to a psychological, social adulthood. The family patterns that revolve around adult children can remain inert for decades, are often resistant to conventional therapy, and can cause ...
Dan Dulberger, Haim Omer
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Emerging Adulthood

2015
Arnett’s (2000) theory of emerging adulthood has been both widely celebrated and strongly criticized. However, it has not yet been closely scrutinized for what it claims to be: “a new theory of development for the late teens though the twenties.” The purpose of this chapter is to take up this scrutiny, evaluating some of the major postulations and ...
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Sexuality in Emerging Adulthood

2021
Abstract Scientific theory is essential to research on sexuality and sexual experiences in emerging adulthood. Theory serves a number of important functions for research, including prediction and explanation. Research has often utilized theory to help enhance what is known about sexuality among those in the developmental period of ...
Spencer B. Olmstead, Kristin M. Anders
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Emerging Adulthood Revisited

2023
Abstract There is a dispute as to how to understand and conceptualize the instabilities of emerging adulthood. Unlike earlier approaches which took a “deficit” perspective, this book, based on a 12-year study, describes the active journey that young people might take and the ways they navigate through these years. This chapter summarizes
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Adolescence and emerging adulthood

2016
Adolescence and emerging childhood forms an increasing proportion of the lifespan of urbanized individuals. Glycaemic control worsens during adolescence; physiology and psychology contribute. A1C levels peak around 9% (75 mmol/mol) before declining from late teens onwards. However, unchanging glycaemia (tracking) is common.
Richard J. Petts, Scott A. Desmond
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Emerging Adulthood Brain Development

2014
Emerging adulthood (EA) is marked by a prolonged developmental transition to adulthood, dynamic personal and environmental circumstances, and unique patterns of vulnerability to psychological dysfunction. Neurodevelopment in childhood and adolescence has been studied extensively, but EA has not yet received its due attention from developmental ...
Bradley Taber-Thomas   +1 more
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Beyond Emerging Adulthood

2014
Abstract This chapter focuses on the transition from emerging adulthood to the next stage of life. First there is a look at how adulthood has been defined in traditional cultures and in the past in American history. Then research is presented showing how emerging adults today define adulthood and assess their own progress toward adult ...
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Emerging Adulthood in Sociolinguistics

Language and Linguistics Compass, 2012
AbstractIn her landmark paper Age as a Sociolinguistic Variable, Eckert states that “age is a person’s place at a given time in relation to the social order: a stage, a condition, a place in history” (1997:151). Speaker age has long been one of the primary social categories within sociolinguistics, and may be argued to be the sociolinguistic category ...
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Communication During Emerging Adulthood

2015
Young adulthood has always held a prominent place in the study of families and family communication. Young adulthood has traditionally been seen as a period of individual transition and union formation that was accompanied by vast changes in family dynamics and communication patterns.
Brian J. Willoughby, Arnett Jeffrey J.
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Emerging Adulthood

Die Psychotherapie, 2023
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