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Emotional availability (EA) brief: single session feedback and coaching for improving fathers' emotional availability across a wide developmental spectrum

2023
Fathers are a historically underrepresented population in developmental research and must be considered for their modern presentation in parenting processes. Emotional Availability (EA) is a construct that captures the parent-child relationship quality and predicts positive outcomes for children.
Lincoln, Michael   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

Emotional Availability Scale Among Three U.S. Race/Ethnic Groups

Western Journal of Nursing Research, 2018
This study used a cross-sectional design to conduct a subgroup psychometric analysis of the Emotional Availability Scale among matched Hispanic ( n = 20), African American ( n = 20), and European American ( n = 10) English-speaking mother–child dyads in the United States.
Della J. Derscheid   +5 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Maternal emotional availability during infant bedtime: An ecological framework.

Journal of Family Psychology, 2014
Mothers' depressive symptoms, coparenting quality, maternal and infant sleep, and infant temperament during infants' first 6 months were examined as predictors of mothers' emotional availability (EA) at bedtime with their infants at 9 months. Maternal EA was assessed from video recordings of mother-infant interactions.
Bo-Ram, Kim, Douglas M, Teti
openaire   +2 more sources

Applying the Emotional Availability Scales to children with disabilities

Infant Mental Health Journal, 2005
AbstractIn this article, we describe issues regarding emotional availability and its application to children with disabilities. We then apply this approach to the scoring of emotional availability for caregiver–child interactions of children with disabilities, with information based on children with genetic mental retardation syndromes, children with ...
Zeynep, Biringen   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Emotional Availability in Mother-Twin Dyads

Psychiatry, 1994
The term "emotional availability" has evolved primarily in therapeutic contexts where it refers to the sensitive engagement of the therapist in the patient's narrative of life experiences and openness to the patient's emotional expressions (Emde 1980).
J, Robinson, C, Little
openaire   +2 more sources

Emotional availability in infants' relationships with multiple caregivers.

American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 1995
Emotional availability was rated in infants' relationships with significant caregivers over a nine-month period. Infant responsivity to and involvement of caregivers was found to be related to individual sensitivity, while each relationship appeared to be unique, and not based on the nature of the infants' relationships with their mothers.
L, Zimmerman, L, McDonald
openaire   +2 more sources

On the Analyst's Emotional Availability and Vulnerability

Contemporary Psychoanalysis, 1996
A SUPERVISEE REPORTED A SESSION in which she found herself feeling like she was having a "stroke." Her experience was that she could not follow what her patient was saying, the words were all in a jumble in her mind, and she could not comprehend at all. She felt she could not go on listening.
openaire   +1 more source

The role of maternal emotional availability and attachment in child emotion regulation

2021
Emotions are an essential aspect of human life. They help us to evaluate the importance of an event, to act quickly in a variety of situations, and to communicate with others in social interactions. However, the intensity or duration of emotional responses may not always be adaptive in a given situation or social context.
openaire   +1 more source

An Approach to Emotions Through Lexical Availability

2022
Pedro Salcedo-Lagos   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

Emotional availability in 3 ethnic groups

Infant Behavior and Development, 1998
Marcela C. Acevedo, JoAnn Robinson
openaire   +1 more source

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