Publications of Philip R. Costanzo
%% Journal Articles
@article{fds357872,
Author = {Kuchirko, Y and Bennet, A and Halim, ML and Costanzo, P and Ruble,
D},
Title = {The influence of siblings on ethnically diverse children's
gender typing across early development.},
Journal = {Developmental psychology},
Volume = {57},
Number = {5},
Pages = {771-782},
Year = {2021},
Month = {May},
Abstract = {Most U.S. children grow up with siblings. Theory and prior
work suggest that older siblings are important sources of
gender-related information and socialization. However, few
studies have investigated the patterns of these associations
longitudinally across early childhood. The present study
examines the influence of sibling presence and gender
composition on the trajectory of early gender-typed behavior
and appearance in children from age 2 through 6 in a diverse
sample of Dominican American (36%), African American (33%),
and Mexican American (31%) mother-child dyads (<i>N</i> =
232; 112 girls, 120 boys) from low-income households in New
York City (<i>M</i> = $20,459, <i>SD</i> = 14,632). Results
found that children without older siblings spent more time
playing with counterstereotypical toys and their mothers'
reports indicated similar behavior over the past month
(e.g., a girl playing with toy vehicles and balls; a boy
playing with toy kitchen sets and dolls) than children with
older siblings. Further, children with at least one
other-gender sibling (e.g., a girl with an older brother)
played more frequently with counterstereotypical toys
compared with children with only same-gender siblings (e.g.,
a girl with only older sisters). Results on the relation
between siblings and gender appearance were mixed. Older
siblings may thus influence early trajectories of important
gender domains (e.g., toy play), which can have various
long-term implications for developing skills and interests.
(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights
reserved).},
Doi = {10.1037/dev0001173},
Key = {fds357872}
}
@article{fds352792,
Author = {Franzese, AT and Blalock, DV and Blalock, KM and Wilson, SM and Medenblik, A and Costanzo, PR and Strauman, TJ},
Title = {Regulatory Focus and Substance Use in Adolescents:
Protective Effects of Prevention Orientation.},
Journal = {Subst Use Misuse},
Volume = {56},
Number = {1},
Pages = {33-38},
Year = {2021},
Abstract = {Substance use is a major risk factor for negative health and
functioning outcomes among middle schoolers. The purpose of
this study was to assess whether individual differences in
the adolescents' goal orientation are associated with
elevated or attenuated risk for substance use. Regulatory
focus theory stipulates that individuals vary in their
strength of orientation toward promotion goals ("making good
things happen") and prevention goals ("keeping bad things
from happening"). Objectives: We sought to examine the
association between individual differences in regulatory
focus and adolescents' reports of their own and their
friends' substance use. Methods: Participants were 241
seventh grade students who completed measures of regulatory
focus (promotion and prevention orientation), self-reported
substance use, perceived substance use habits of peers, and
demographics. Logistic regression models were used to
examine adjusted odds of lifetime tobacco use, alcohol use,
and marijuana use for both participants' own use and their
reports of friends' use. Results: Prevention orientation was
associated with lower odds of all self-reported lifetime
substance use outcomes (tobacco, alcohol, and marijuana).
Prevention orientation was also associated with lower odds
of reporting all types of substance use among friends.
Promotion orientation was not associated with any
self-reported substance use outcome, and was only associated
with higher odds of reporting lifetime alcohol use among
friends. Conclusions: These findings underscore the
importance of regulatory focus as it relates to adolescent
substance use. Future research may seek to incorporate
regulatory focus within interventions intended to prevent or
delay initiation of substance use in adolescents.},
Doi = {10.1080/10826084.2020.1833926},
Key = {fds352792}
}
@article{fds350252,
Author = {Bennet, A and Kuchirko, Y and Halim, ML and Costanzo, PR and Ruble,
D},
Title = {The influence of center-based care on young children's
gender development},
Journal = {Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology},
Volume = {69},
Year = {2020},
Month = {July},
Abstract = {Many U.S. children spend a significant amount of time in
center-based care prior to entering preschool. Previous
theory and research would suggest center-based care settings
offer important opportunities for gender socialization as
children here are surrounded by multiple sources of
gender-typing information (e.g. peers, adults, toys and
activities). The present longitudinal study examined whether
center-based care enrollment status influences level and
timing of children's gender-typed behaviors (same-gender
friendships, play and appearance), and knowledge
(self-categorization and stereotyping) between the ages of
2–5. Participants were children and their mothers of
low-income, urban backgrounds (N = 232; African American,
Mexican American, and Dominican American). Overall, children
enrolled in center-based care at ages 2 and 3 showed higher
gender-typing patterns than children enrolled later or not
at all. Associations were strongest for same-gender-friendships
and gender-typed play, domains that might affect children's
subsequent engagement in and learning of certain tasks,
skillsets, and activities.},
Doi = {10.1016/j.appdev.2020.101157},
Key = {fds350252}
}
@article{fds343344,
Author = {Peairs, KF and Sheppard, CS and Putallaz, M and Costanzo,
PR},
Title = {Leader of the Pack: Academic Giftedness and Leadership in
Early Adolescence},
Journal = {Journal of Advanced Academics},
Volume = {30},
Number = {4},
Pages = {416-440},
Year = {2019},
Month = {November},
Abstract = {The present study expanded our current understanding of
leadership among academically gifted seventh-grade students
by examining peer-identified leaders of naturally occurring
social groups in a mixed ability setting. Three consecutive
cohorts of seventh-grade students (N = 474; 57% female; 43%
European American) attending a public magnet secondary
school participated. Results indicated that gifted students
were more apt to be identified as leaders than nongifted
youth and both conventional and unconventional styles of
leadership related similarly to higher social standing and
influence in the peer network. Nongifted leaders displayed a
mixed profile of prosocial and more risky deviant behavior,
whereas gifted leaders displayed a primarily prosocial
leadership style. However, gifted leaders perceived
themselves to be more influential and intimidating than
other students and also endorsed sensation seeking
tendencies more than other students. Findings underscore the
heterogeneity of leadership during young adolescence and the
distinct profile of gifted leaders compared with other
leaders and gifted peers.},
Doi = {10.1177/1932202X19847667},
Key = {fds343344}
}
@article{fds342431,
Author = {Peairs, KF and Putallaz, M and Costanzo, PR},
Title = {From A (Aggression) to V (Victimization): Peer Status and
Adjustment Among Academically Gifted Students in Early
Adolescence},
Journal = {Gifted Child Quarterly},
Volume = {63},
Number = {3},
Pages = {185-200},
Year = {2019},
Month = {July},
Abstract = {Peer status is an important indicator and predictor of
adjustment. While gifted children tend to enjoy favorable
peer status, their social functioning during adolescence is
less clear. The current study seeks to enhance this
understanding by examining both preference- and
reputation-based peer status of gifted adolescents. Peer
nominations were used to assess the peer status, aggression,
victimization, and prosocial leadership of 327 public school
seventh graders (44% male; 42% White). School records
provided giftedness information, course grade, and
standardized test scores, and substance use was
self-reported. Gifted students were viewed as less
aggressive and more prosocial and had higher academic
achievement than nonidentified students. Giftedness
moderated the peer status–adjustment relationship.
Rejection related to higher victimization and test scores,
but these associations were most exaggerated for gifted
students. Popularity positively related to aggression and
substance use; however, the associations were greatly
attenuated for gifted students. Findings underscore the
heterogeneity of gifted adolescents’ social
experiences.},
Doi = {10.1177/0016986219838973},
Key = {fds342431}
}
@article{fds335642,
Author = {Hussong, AM and Langley, HA and Rothenberg, WA and Coffman, JL and Halberstadt, AG and Costanzo, PR and Mokrova, I},
Title = {Raising Grateful Children One Day at a Time.},
Journal = {Applied developmental science},
Volume = {23},
Number = {4},
Pages = {371-384},
Year = {2019},
Month = {January},
Abstract = {The current study examined micro-developmental processes
related to the socialization of children's gratitude.
Specifically, we tested whether parents who engage in more
frequent daily socialization practices targeting children's
gratitude reported more frequent displays of gratitude by
their children after controlling for potential confounds
(i.e., parents' own gratitude, sensitive parenting, and
children's socio-emotional functioning). The sample of 101
parent-child dyads completed a baseline lab visit followed
by a seven-day diary study. Using multi-level modeling, we
found that parents who engaged in more frequent gratitude
socialization acts (versus parents with fewer socialization
acts) reported more frequent displays of gratitude by their
children across the seven-day period (a between-dyad
effect). We also found that on days when a parent engaged in
more socialization acts than usual (versus days when that
parent engaged in fewer acts than usual) parents reported
relative increases in gratitude displays by their children
(a within-dyad effect). These findings show that parent
socialization acts are associated with children's displayed
gratitude and point to the need for future work to explore
reactive and proactive parent-child interactions that may
underlie these associations as well as associations between
micro-developmental and macro-developmental
processes.},
Doi = {10.1080/10888691.2018.1441713},
Key = {fds335642}
}
@article{fds337726,
Author = {Hussong, AM and Langley, HA and Thomas, T and Coffman, J and Halberstadt, A and Costanzo, P and Rothenberg,
WA},
Title = {Measuring Gratitude in Children.},
Journal = {The journal of positive psychology},
Volume = {14},
Number = {5},
Pages = {563-575},
Publisher = {Informa UK Limited},
Year = {2019},
Month = {January},
Abstract = {Gratitude is a rich socioemotional construct that emerges
over development beginning in early childhood. Existing
measures of children's gratitude as a trait or behavior may
be limited because they do not capture different aspects of
gratitude moments (i.e., awareness, thoughts, feelings, and
actions) and the way that these facets appear in children.
The current study evaluates a battery of new measures
assessing children's gratitude to address these limitations.
Parent-child dyads (<i>N</i>=101; children aged 6-9)
completed a lab-based assessment followed by a 7-day online
parental diary and 18-month follow-up survey. In addition to
newly developed measures of children's gratitude, the
battery included indicators of convergent, concurrent,
divergent, and predictive validity. Results demonstrate the
complexity of gratitude as a construct and the relative
benefits and limits of various assessment modalities.
Implications for the measurement of children's gratitude and
suggestions for future research on the development of
gratitude are discussed.},
Doi = {10.1080/17439760.2018.1497692},
Key = {fds337726}
}
@article{fds326697,
Author = {Golonka, MM and Peairs, KF and Malone, PS and Grimes, CL and Costanzo,
PR},
Title = {Natural Peer Leaders as Substance Use Prevention Agents: the
Teens' Life Choice Project.},
Journal = {Prevention science : the official journal of the Society for
Prevention Research},
Volume = {18},
Number = {5},
Pages = {555-566},
Year = {2017},
Month = {July},
Abstract = {In adolescent social groups, natural peer leaders have been
found to engage in more frequent experimentation with
substance use and to possess disproportionate power to
affect the behavior and social choices of their associated
peer followers. In the current exploratory study, we used
sociometrics and social cognitive mapping to identify
natural leaders of cliques in a seventh grade population and
invited the leaders to develop anti-drug presentations for
an audience of younger peers. The program employed
social-psychological approaches directed at having leaders
proceed from extrinsic inducements to intrinsic
identification with their persuasive products in the context
of the group intervention process. The goals of the
intervention were to induce substance resistant
self-persuasion in the leaders and to produce a spread of
this resistance effect to their peer followers. To test the
intervention, we compared the substance use behaviors of the
selected leaders and their peers to a control cohort. The
study found preliminary support that the intervention
produced changes in the substance use behavior among the
leaders who participated in the intervention, but did not
detect a spread to non-leader peers in the short term. This
descriptive study speaks to the plausibility of employing
self-persuasion paradigms to bring about change in high-risk
behaviors among highly central adolescents. In addition, it
highlights the viability of applying social psychological
principles to prevention work and calls for more research in
this area.},
Doi = {10.1007/s11121-017-0790-4},
Key = {fds326697}
}
@article{fds331136,
Author = {Rothenberg, WA and Hussong, AM and Langley, HA and Egerton, GA and Halberstadt, AG and Coffman, JL and Mokrova, I and Costanzo,
PR},
Title = {Grateful parents raising grateful children: Niche selection
and the socialization of child gratitude.},
Journal = {Applied developmental science},
Volume = {21},
Number = {2},
Pages = {106-120},
Year = {2017},
Month = {January},
Abstract = {Given that children's exposure to gratitude-related
activities may be one way that parents can socialize
gratitude in their children, we examined whether parents'
niche selection (i.e., tendency to choose perceived
gratitude-inducing activities for their children) mediates
the association between parents' reports of their own and
their children's gratitude. Parent-child dyads (<i>N</i>
=101; children aged 6-9; 52% girls; 80% Caucasian; 85%
mothers) participated in a laboratory visit and parents also
completed a seven-day online diary regarding children's
gratitude. Decomposing specific indirect effects within a
structural equation model, we found that parents high in
gratitude were more likely to set goals to use niche
selection as a gratitude socialization strategy, and thereby
more likely to place their children in gratitude-related
activities. Placement in these activities, in turn, was
associated with more frequent expression of gratitude in
children. We describe future directions for research on
parents' role in socializing gratitude in their
children.},
Doi = {10.1080/10888691.2016.1175945},
Key = {fds331136}
}
@article{fds322492,
Author = {Gohar, D and Leary, MR and Costanzo, PR},
Title = {Self-presentational congruence and psychosocial adjustment:
A test of three models},
Journal = {Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology},
Volume = {35},
Number = {7},
Pages = {589-608},
Publisher = {Guilford Publications},
Year = {2016},
Month = {September},
Abstract = {People regularly monitor and control the impressions others
form of them but differ in the degree to which they both
convey impressions that are consistent with their private
self-views (self-presentational congruence) and present
different images of themselves to different targets
(self-presentational variability). This study examined the
implications of self-presentational congruence and
variability for psychological and social well-being.
Participants rated the impressions that they tried to make
on nine individuals in their lives and completed measures of
psychosocial well-being. Results indicated that
self-presentational congruence predicted psychosocial
adjustment (higher subjective well-being, social support
quality, social efficacy, and self-esteem; and lower
anxiety, depression, and loneliness) beyond personality
variables such as self-consciousness, fear of negative
evaluation, and Machiavellianism. Self-presentational
variability across targets also predicted better
psychosocial adjustment, with variability across
nonintimates being most predictive. Thus,
self-presentational flexibility may promote psychosocial
well-being as long as people's projected images are
reasonably congruent with their private self-views.},
Doi = {10.1521/jscp.2016.35.7.589},
Key = {fds322492}
}
@article{fds340256,
Author = {Halberstadt, AG and Langley, HA and Hussong, AM and Rothenberg, WA and Coffman, JL and Mokrova, I and Costanzo, PR},
Title = {Parents' understanding of gratitude in children: A thematic
analysis},
Journal = {Early Childhood Research Quarterly},
Volume = {36},
Pages = {439-451},
Publisher = {Elsevier BV},
Year = {2016},
Month = {March},
Abstract = {Current definitions of gratitude are based primarily on
research with adults about their own experiences of
gratitude, yet what children are grateful for, and how they
understand, experience, and express gratitude may be very
different. To better understand the forms that gratitude may
take in children, we asked 20 parents in six focus groups to
talk about their views of gratitude in young children.
Parents had at least one child who was 6-years old. Sessions
were conducted in the children's schools and lasted for one
hour. Transcripts were examined using inductive analysis and
three types of saturation were achieved. Parents described
children as grateful for both tangible and intangible gifts,
and identified multiple cognitive, emotional, and behavioral
aspects of gratitude in their children. Gratitude was
understood to be a momentary experience, a more enduring
feeling, and a way of being, suggesting a more continuous
perspective regarding the duration of gratitude. Parents
identified four cognitive and emotional barriers that are
effectively opposites of gratitude. Parents also recognized
that gratitude develops in children over time. Implications
for understanding gratitude from a developmental
perspective, as well as suggestions for future research in
the development of children's gratitude are
discussed.},
Doi = {10.1016/j.ecresq.2016.01.014},
Key = {fds340256}
}
@article{fds322493,
Author = {Costanzo, PR},
Title = {Conscientiousness in life course context: a
commentary.},
Journal = {Developmental psychology},
Volume = {50},
Number = {5},
Pages = {1460-1464},
Year = {2014},
Month = {May},
Abstract = {In this commentary, the common themes from the interesting
articles in this special section of Developmental Psychology
are considered as they illuminate the potential ontogenetic
sources of the conscientiousness-well-being-longevity
interconnections that have emerged in recent research. In
particular, consideration is given to the changing nature of
the expression of conscientiousness over the life course and
the importance of the causally linked chain of developmental
events associated with the sustenance of this trait from
early childhood to later life. Methodological as well as
conceptual issues are part of the common thematic analysis
provided. In addition, several more or less neglected issues
are addressed in the commentary. These include an
examination of the potential roles of self-presentation
social context and social aggregation in the developmentally
emergent conscientiousness-well-being relationship. Further,
the potential downside of the moral tinge of the
conscientiousness construct is considered, as is the
cultural variation in the benefits of conscientiousness to
well-being. Finally, the applied significance of research on
the conscientiousness-well-being link to health promotion
over the life course is addressed. The commentary concludes
with reflections on the transformation of 1970s trait-like
conceptions as unbending tautological predictors of behavior
into the situationally and developmentally nuanced
conceptions of conscientiousness provided in these collected
articles.},
Doi = {10.1037/a0036024},
Key = {fds322493}
}
@article{fds251599,
Author = {Armstrong, JM and Ruttle, PL and Burk, LR and Costanzo, PR and Strauman,
TJ and Essex, MJ},
Title = {Early risk factors for alcohol use across high school and
its covariation with deviant friends.},
Journal = {Journal of studies on alcohol and drugs},
Volume = {74},
Number = {5},
Pages = {746-756},
Year = {2013},
Month = {September},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23948534},
Abstract = {<h4>Objective</h4>Past research has associated childhood
characteristics and experiences with alcohol use at single
time points in adolescence. Other work has focused on
drinking trajectories across adolescence but with risk
factors typically no earlier than middle or high school.
Similarly, although the connection between underage drinking
and affiliation with deviant friends is well established,
early risk factors for their covariation across adolescence
are uncertain. The present study examines the influence of
early individual and contextual factors on (a) trajectories
across high school of per-occasion alcohol use and (b) the
covariation of alcohol use and deviant friends over
time.<h4>Method</h4>In a longitudinal community sample (n =
374; 51% female), temperamental disinhibition, authoritarian
and authoritative parenting, and parental alcohol use were
assessed during childhood, and adolescents reported on
alcohol use and affiliation with deviant friends in the
spring of Grades 9, 10, 11, and 12.<h4>Results</h4>Early
parental alcohol use predicted the intercept of adolescent
drinking. Subsequent patterns of adolescent alcohol use were
predicted by sex and interactions of sex and childhood
disinhibition with early authoritarian parenting.
Additionally, childhood disinhibition interacted with
parental alcohol use to moderate the covariation of drinking
and deviant friends.<h4>Conclusions</h4>These findings
highlight early individual and contextual risk factors for
alcohol use across high school, extending previous work and
underscoring the importance of developmental approaches and
longitudinal techniques for understanding patterns of growth
in underage drinking.},
Doi = {10.15288/jsad.2013.74.746},
Key = {fds251599}
}
@article{fds251600,
Author = {Richman, LS and Boynton, MH and Costanzo, P and Banas,
K},
Title = {Interactive Effects of Discrimination and Racial Identity on
Alcohol-Related Thoughts and Use},
Journal = {Basic and Applied Social Psychology},
Volume = {35},
Number = {4},
Pages = {396-407},
Publisher = {Informa UK Limited},
Year = {2013},
Month = {July},
ISSN = {0197-3533},
url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000321687100007&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92},
Abstract = {The interrelationships among racial discrimination, non
race-based rejection, racial identity (RI), and alcohol
cognitions and use were assessed in this research. In Study
1, individuals who experienced overt discrimination and who
were high in RI were less likely than those low in RI to
meet criteria for alcohol abuse disorder. In Study 2,
discrimination and rejection were causally related to a
faster reaction time in a lexical decision task to
alcohol-related concepts as compared to neutral words,
especially for those low in RI. Implications of
discrimination and rejection on substance use and other
risky health behaviors are discussed. © 2013 Copyright
Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.},
Doi = {10.1080/01973533.2013.803966},
Key = {fds251600}
}
@article{fds251632,
Author = {Fuemmeler, BF and Yang, C and Costanzo, P and Hoyle, RH and Siegler, IC and Williams, RB and Ostbye, T},
Title = {Parenting styles and body mass index trajectories from
adolescence to adulthood.},
Journal = {Health Psychol},
Volume = {31},
Number = {4},
Pages = {441-449},
Year = {2012},
Month = {July},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22545979},
Abstract = {OBJECTIVE: Parenting styles such as authoritarian,
disengaged, or permissive are thought to be associated with
greater adolescent obesity risk than an authoritative style.
This study assessed the relationship between parenting
styles and changes in body mass index (BMI) from adolescence
to young adulthood. METHOD: The study included self-reported
data from adolescents in the National Longitudinal Study of
Adolescent Health. Factor mixture modeling, a data-driven
approach, was used to classify participants into parenting
style groups based on measures of acceptance and control.
Latent growth modeling (LGM) identified patterns of
developmental changes in BMI. After a number of potential
confounders were controlled for, parenting style variables
were entered as predictors of BMI trajectories. Analyses
were also conducted for male and female individuals of 3
racial-ethnic groups (Hispanic, black, white) to assess
whether parenting styles were differentially associated with
BMI trajectories in these 6 groups. RESULTS: Parenting
styles were classified into 4 groups: authoritarian,
disengaged, permissive, and balanced. Compared with the
balanced parenting style, authoritarian and disengaged
parenting styles were associated with a less steep average
BMI increase (linear slope) over time, but also less
leveling off (quadratic) of BMI over time. Differences in
BMI trajectories were observed for various genders and
races, but the differences did not reach statistical
significance. CONCLUSION: Adolescents who reported having
parents with authoritarian or disengaged parenting styles
had greater increases in BMI as they transitioned to young
adulthood despite having a lower BMI trajectory through
adolescence.},
Doi = {10.1037/a0027927},
Key = {fds251632}
}
@article{fds251630,
Author = {Sheppard, CS and Golonka, M and Costanzo, PR},
Title = {Evaluating the impact of a substance use intervention
program on the peer status and influence of adolescent peer
leaders.},
Journal = {Prevention science : the official journal of the Society for
Prevention Research},
Volume = {13},
Number = {1},
Pages = {75-85},
Year = {2012},
Month = {February},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21935657},
Abstract = {The current study involved an examination of the impact of a
peer-led substance use intervention program on the peer
leaders beyond the substance use-related goals of the
intervention. Specifically, unintended consequences of an
adult-sanctioned intervention on the targeted peer leader
change agents were investigated, including whether their
participation affected their peer status, social influence,
or self perceptions. Twenty-two 7th grade peer-identified
intervention leaders were compared to 22 control leaders
(who did not experience the intervention) and 146 cohort
peers. Three groups of measures were employed: sociometric
and behavioral nominations, social cognitive mapping, and
leadership self-perceptions. Results indicated that
unintended consequences appear to be a legitimate concern
for females. Female intervention leaders declined in
perceived popularity and liked most nominations over time,
whereas males increased in total leader nominations.
Explanations for these results are discussed and further
directions suggested.},
Doi = {10.1007/s11121-011-0248-z},
Key = {fds251630}
}
@article{fds251628,
Author = {Sloan, FA and Costanzo, PR and Belsky, D and Holmberg, E and Malone, PS and Wang, Y and Kertesz, S},
Title = {Heavy drinking in early adulthood and outcomes at mid
life.},
Journal = {Journal of epidemiology and community health},
Volume = {65},
Number = {7},
Pages = {600-605},
Year = {2011},
Month = {July},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20713371},
Abstract = {<h4>Background</h4>Heavy drinking in early adulthood among
Blacks, but not Whites, has been found to be associated with
more deleterious health outcomes, lower labor market success
and lower educational attainment at mid-life. This study
analysed psychosocial pathways underlying racial differences
in the impact of early heavy alcohol use on occupational and
educational attainment at mid-life.<h4>Methods</h4>Outcomes
in labor market participation, occupational prestige and
educational attainment were measured in early and
mid-adulthood. A mixture model was used to identify
psychosocial classes that explain how race-specific
differences in the relationship between drinking in early
adulthood and occupational outcomes in mid-life operate.
Data came from Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young
Adults, a longitudinal epidemiologic study.<h4>Results</h4>Especially
for Blacks, heavy drinking in early adulthood was associated
with a lower probability of being employed in mid-life.
Among employed persons, there was a link between heavy
drinking for both Whites and Blacks and decreased
occupational attainment at mid-life. We grouped individuals
into three distinct distress classes based on external
stressors and indicators of internally generated stress.
Blacks were more likely to belong to the higher distressed
classes as were heavy drinkers in early adulthood.
Stratifying the data by distress class, relationships
between heavy drinking, race and heavy drinking-race
interactions were overall weaker than in the pooled
analysis.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Disproportionate
intensification of life stresses in Blacks renders them more
vulnerable to long-term effects of heavy
drinking.},
Doi = {10.1136/jech.2009.102228},
Key = {fds251628}
}
@article{fds251629,
Author = {Peairs, KF and Eichen, D and Putallaz, M and Costanzo, PR and Grimes,
CL},
Title = {Academic Giftedness and Alcohol Use in Early
Adolescence.},
Journal = {The gifted child quarterly},
Volume = {55},
Number = {2},
Pages = {95-110},
Year = {2011},
Month = {April},
ISSN = {0016-9862},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21949444},
Abstract = {Adolescence is a period of development particularly
vulnerable to the effects of alcohol use, with recent
studies underscoring alcohol's effects on adolescent brain
development. Despite the alarming rates and consequences of
adolescent alcohol use, gifted adolescents are often
overlooked as being at risk for early alcohol use. Although
gifted adolescents may possess protective factors that
likely inhibit the use of alcohol, some gifted youth may be
vulnerable to initiating alcohol use during adolescence as
experimenting with alcohol may be one way gifted youth
choose to compensate for the social price (whether real or
perceived) of their academic talents. To address the dearth
of research on alcohol use among gifted adolescents the
current study (a) examined the extent to which gifted
adolescents use alcohol relative to their nongifted peers
and (b) examined the adjustment profile of gifted
adolescents who had tried alcohol relative to nongifted
adolescents who tried alcohol as well as gifted and
nongifted abstainers. More than 300 students in seventh
grade (42.5% gifted) participated in the present study.
Results indicated gifted students have, in fact, tried
alcohol at rates that do not differ from nongifted students.
Although trying alcohol was generally associated with
negative adjustment, giftedness served as a moderating
factor such that gifted students who had tried alcohol were
less at risk than their nongifted peers. However, evidence
also suggests that gifted adolescents who tried alcohol may
be a part of a peer context that promotes substance use,
which may place these youth at risk for adjustment
difficulties in the future.},
Doi = {10.1177/0016986210392220},
Key = {fds251629}
}
@article{fds251633,
Author = {Burk, LR and Armstrong, JM and Goldsmith, HH and Klein, MH and Strauman,
TJ and Costanzo, P and Essex, MJ},
Title = {Sex, temperament, and family context: how the interaction of
early factors differentially predict adolescent alcohol use
and are mediated by proximal adolescent factors.},
Journal = {Psychology of addictive behaviors : journal of the Society
of Psychologists in Addictive Behaviors},
Volume = {25},
Number = {1},
Pages = {1-15},
Year = {2011},
Month = {March},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21443307},
Abstract = {Adolescent alcohol use is common and has serious immediate
and long-term ramifications. While concurrent individual and
context factors are robustly associated with adolescent
alcohol use, the influence of early childhood factors,
particularly in interaction with child sex, are less clear.
Using a prospective community sample of 362 (190 girls),
this study investigated sex differences in the joint
influence of distal childhood and proximal adolescent
factors on Grade 10 alcohol use. All risk factors and
two-way early individual-by-context interactions, and
interactions of each of these with child sex, were entered
into the initial regression. Significant sex interactions
prompted the use of separate models for girls and boys. In
addition to the identification of early (family
socioeconomic status, authoritative parenting style) and
proximal adolescent (mental health symptoms, deviant
friends) risk factors for both girls and boys, results
highlighted important sex differences. In particular, girls
with higher alcohol consumption at Grade 10 were
distinguished by the interaction of early temperamental
disinhibition and exposure to parental stress; boys with
higher alcohol consumption at Grade 10 were distinguished
primarily by early temperamental negative affect. Results
have implications for the timing and type of interventions
offered to adolescents.},
Doi = {10.1037/a0022349},
Key = {fds251633}
}
@article{fds251626,
Author = {Platt, A and Sloan, FA and Costanzo, P},
Title = {Alcohol-consumption trajectories and associated
characteristics among adults older than age
50.},
Journal = {Journal of studies on alcohol and drugs},
Volume = {71},
Number = {2},
Pages = {169-179},
Year = {2010},
Month = {March},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20230713},
Abstract = {<h4>Objective</h4>This study examined changes in drinking
behavior after age 50 and baseline personal characteristics
and subsequent life events associated with different
alcohol-consumption trajectories during a 14-year follow-up
period.<h4>Method</h4>Data were taken from the Health and
Retirement Study. The study sample included individuals ages
51-61 in 1992 who survived the sample period (1992-2006) and
had at least five interviews with alcohol consumption
information, yielding an analysis sample of 6,787 (3,760
women). We employed linear regression to determine drinking
trajectories over 1992-2006. Based on these findings, each
sample person was classified into one of five drinking
categories. We used multinomial logit analysis to assess the
relationship between personal demographic, income, health,
and attitudinal characteristics as well as life events and
drinking-trajectory category.<h4>Results</h4>Overall,
alcohol consumption declined. However, rates of decline
differed appreciably among sample persons, and for a
minority, alcohol consumption increased. Persons with
increasing consumption over time were more likely to be
affluent (relative-risk ratio [RRR] = 1.09, 95% CI [1.05,
1.12]), highly educated (RRR = 1.20, 95% CI [1.09, 1.31]),
male, White (RRR = 3.54, 95% CI [1.01, 12.39]), unmarried,
less religious, and in excellent to good health. A history
of problem drinking before baseline was associated with
increases in alcohol use, whereas the reverse was true for
persons with histories of few or no drinking
problems.<h4>Conclusions</h4>There are substantial
differences in drinking trajectories at the individual level
in midlife and late life. A problem-drinking history is
predictive of alcohol consumption patterns in later
life.},
Doi = {10.15288/jsad.2010.71.169},
Key = {fds251626}
}
@article{fds251627,
Author = {Li, Y and Costanzo, PR and Putallaz, M},
Title = {Maternal socialization goals, parenting styles, and social
emotional adjustment among Chinese and European American
young adults: testing a mediation model.},
Journal = {The Journal of Genetic Psychology},
Volume = {171},
Number = {4},
Pages = {330-362},
Year = {2010},
ISSN = {0022-1325},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21171548},
Abstract = {The authors compared the associations among perceived
maternal socialization goals (self-development, filial
piety, and collectivism), perceived maternal parenting
styles (authoritative, authoritarian, and training), and the
social-emotional adjustment (self-esteem, academic
self-efficacy, and depression) between Chinese and European
American young adults. The mediation processes in which
socialization goals relate to young adults' adjustment
outcomes through parenting styles were examined. Results
showed that European American participants perceived higher
maternal self-development socialization goals, whereas
Chinese participants perceived higher maternal collectivism
socialization goals as well as more authoritarian parenting.
Cross-cultural similarities were found in the associations
between perceived maternal authoritative parenting and
socioemotional adjustment (e.g., higher self-esteem and
higher academic self-efficacy) across the two cultural
groups. However, perceived maternal authoritarian and
training parenting styles were found only to be related to
Chinese participants' adjustment (e.g., higher academic
self-efficacy and lower depression). The mediation analyses
showed that authoritative parenting significantly mediated
the positive associations between the self-development and
collectivism goal and socioemotional adjustment for both
cultural groups. Additionally, training parenting
significantly mediated the positive association between the
filial piety goal and young adults' academic self-efficacy
for the Chinese group only. Findings of this study highlight
the importance of examining parental socialization goals in
cross-cultural parenting research.},
Doi = {10.1080/00221325.2010.505969},
Key = {fds251627}
}
@article{fds251641,
Author = {Sloan, FA and Malone, PS and Kertesz, SG and Wang, Y and Costanzo,
PR},
Title = {Racial differences in the relationship between alcohol
consumption in early adulthood and occupational attainment
at midlife.},
Journal = {American journal of public health},
Volume = {99},
Number = {12},
Pages = {2261-2267},
Year = {2009},
Month = {December},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19834006},
Abstract = {<h4>Objectives</h4>We assessed the relationship between
alcohol consumption in young adulthood (ages 18-30 years)
and occupational success 15 years later among Blacks and
Whites.<h4>Methods</h4>We analyzed data from the Coronary
Artery Risk Development in Young Adults Study on employment
status and occupational prestige at year 15 from baseline.
The primary predictor was weekly alcohol use at baseline,
after stratification by race and adjustment for
socioeconomic factors.<h4>Results</h4>We detected racial
differences in the relationship between alcohol use in early
adulthood and employment status at midlife. Blacks who were
very heavy drinkers at baseline were more than 4 times as
likely as Blacks who were occasional drinkers to be
unemployed at year 15 (odds ratio [OR]=4.34; 95% confidence
interval [CI]=2.22, 8.47). We found no statistically
significant relationship among Whites. Occupational prestige
at midlife was negatively related to very heavy drinking,
but after adjustment for marital status, active coping, life
stress, and educational attainment, this relationship was
statistically significant only among Blacks.<h4>Conclusions</h4>Heavy
drinking during young adulthood was negatively associated
with labor market success at midlife, especially among
Blacks.},
Doi = {10.2105/ajph.2007.127621},
Key = {fds251641}
}
@article{fds304676,
Author = {Miller, S and Lansford, JE and Costanzo, P and Malone, PS and Golonka,
M and Killeya-Jones, LA},
Title = {Early Adolescent Romantic Partner Status, Peer Standing, and
Problem Behaviors.},
Journal = {The Journal of early adolescence},
Volume = {29},
Number = {6},
Pages = {839-861},
Year = {2009},
Month = {December},
ISSN = {0272-4316},
Abstract = {This study examined associations among early adolescent
romantic relationships, peer standing, problem behaviors,
and gender as a moderator of these associations, in a sample
of 320 seventh-grade students. Popular and controversial
status youth were more likely to have a romantic partner,
whereas neglected status youth were less likely to have a
romantic partner. Similarly, youth perceived as conventional
and unconventional leaders were also more likely to have a
romantic partner than were non-leaders. Youth who had a
romantic partner drank more alcohol and were more aggressive
than were youth who did not have a romantic partner. Among
those youth who had romantic partners, those who reported
having more deviance-prone partners were themselves more
likely to use alcohol and to be more aggressive, and those
who engaged in deviant behavior with their partners used
more alcohol. However, these associations varied somewhat by
gender. These findings underscore the salience of early
romantic partner relationships in the adjustment of early
adolescents.},
Doi = {10.1177/0272431609332665},
Key = {fds304676}
}
@article{fds251642,
Author = {Quinlan, NP and Hoy, MB and Costanzo, PR},
Title = {Sticks and Stones: The Effects of Teasing on Psychosocial
Functioning in an Overweight Treatment-seeking
Sample.},
Journal = {Social development (Oxford, England)},
Volume = {18},
Number = {4},
Pages = {978-1001},
Year = {2009},
Month = {November},
ISSN = {0961-205X},
Abstract = {This self-report and observational study explores the
relationship between perceptions of different kinds of
teasing experiences and psychosocial functioning in an
overweight treatment-seeking adolescent population.
Participants were 96 adolescents enrolled in a residential
weight-loss camp program. Prior to the start of treatment,
participants' weight status was measured by trained program
staff, and participants' perceptions of teasing experiences
and psychosocial functioning were assessed through
self-report questionnaires. Controlling for body mass index,
more frequent and upsetting weight-related teasing
experiences were associated with worse psychological
functioning. Adolescents most distressed by weight-related
teasing exhibited lower self-esteem and higher depressive
symptoms regardless of reported frequency of weight-related
teasing. Competence-related teasing was also associated with
more worries about weight, greater depressive symptoms, and
more negative anti-fat attitudes. Weight-related teasing,
but not competence-related teasing, was associated with
lower levels of program and social involvement for heavier
adolescents.},
Doi = {10.1111/j.1467-9507.2008.00521.x},
Key = {fds251642}
}
@article{fds251646,
Author = {Lansford, JE and Killeya-Jones, LA and Miller, S and Costanzo,
PR},
Title = {Early adolescents' social standing in peer groups:
behavioral correlates of stability and change.},
Journal = {Journal of youth and adolescence},
Volume = {38},
Number = {8},
Pages = {1084-1095},
Year = {2009},
Month = {September},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19636773},
Abstract = {Sociometric nominations, social cognitive maps, and
self-report questionnaires were completed in consecutive
years by 327 students (56% girls) followed longitudinally
from grade 7 to grade 8 to examine the stability of social
standing in peer groups and correlates of changes in social
standing. Social preference, perceived popularity, network
centrality, and leadership were moderately stable from grade
7 to grade 8. Alcohol use and relational aggression in grade
7 predicted changes in social preference and centrality,
respectively, between grade 7 and grade 8, but these effects
were moderated by gender and ethnicity. Changes in social
standing from grade 7 to grade 8 were unrelated to grade 8
physical aggression, relational aggression, and alcohol use
after controlling for the grade 7 corollaries of these
behaviors. Results are discussed in terms of their
implications for understanding links between social standing
and problem behaviors during adolescence.},
Doi = {10.1007/s10964-009-9410-3},
Key = {fds251646}
}
@article{fds251645,
Author = {Lansford, JE and Costanzo, PR and Grimes, C and Putallaz, M and Miller,
S and Malone, PS},
Title = {Social Network Centrality and Leadership Status: Links with
Problem Behaviors and Tests of Gender Differences.},
Journal = {Merrill-Palmer quarterly (Wayne State University.
Press)},
Volume = {55},
Number = {1},
Pages = {1-25},
Year = {2009},
Month = {January},
ISSN = {0272-930X},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19763241},
Abstract = {Seventh-grade students (N = 324) completed social cognitive
maps to identify peer groups and peer group leaders,
sociometric nominations to describe their peers' behaviors,
and questionnaires to assess their own behaviors. Peer group
members resembled one another in levels of direct and
indirect aggression and substance use; girls' cliques were
more behaviorally homogenous than were boys' cliques. On
average, leaders (especially if they were boys) were
perceived as engaging in more problem behaviors than were
nonleaders. In girls' cliques, peripheral group members were
more similar to their group leader on indirect aggression
than were girls who were more central to the clique. Peer
leaders perceived themselves as being more able to influence
peers but did not differ from nonleaders in their perceived
susceptibility to peer influence. The findings contribute to
our understanding of processes through which influence may
occur in adolescent peer groups.},
Doi = {10.1353/mpq.0.0014},
Key = {fds251645}
}
@article{fds251647,
Author = {Dunsmore, JC and Bradburn, IS and Costanzo, PR and Fredrickson,
BL},
Title = {Mothers' expressive style and emotional responses to
children's behavior predict children's prosocial and
achievement-related self-ratings},
Journal = {International Journal of Behavioral Development},
Volume = {33},
Number = {3},
Pages = {253-264},
Publisher = {SAGE Publications},
Year = {2009},
Month = {January},
ISSN = {0165-0254},
Abstract = {In this study we investigated whether mothers' typical
expressive style and specific emotional responses to
children's behaviors are linked to children's prosocial and
competence self-ratings. Eight-to 12-year-old children and
their mothers rated how mothers had felt when children
behaved pro-socially and antisocially, achieved and failed
to achieve. Children rated self-descriptiveness of prosocial
and achievement-related traits. Mothers' positive
expressiveness was associated with children's higher
achievement-related self-ratings. Mothers' positive- and
negative-dominant expressiveness was associated with
children's lower prosocial self-ratings. Mothers' happiness
about both children's prosocial and achievement-related
behavior was associated with children's higher self-ratings
for both domains. Mothers' anger about children's antisocial
behavior was related to children's lower self-ratings for
both domains. When mothers were higher in
negative-submissive expressiveness, and responded with more
sadness to children's failure to achieve, children reported
lower achievement self-ratings. Results support the
importance of multidimensional assessment of self-concept
and suggest that parents' typical expressive style moderates
the influence of parents' specific emotional responses on
children's self-ratings. © 2009 The International Society
for the Study of Behavioural Development.},
Doi = {10.1177/0165025408098025},
Key = {fds251647}
}
@article{fds251643,
Author = {Quinlan, NP and Kolotkin, RL and Fuemmeler, BF and Costanzo,
PR},
Title = {Psychosocial outcomes in a weight loss camp for overweight
youth},
Journal = {International Journal of Pediatric Obesity},
Volume = {4},
Number = {3},
Pages = {124-142},
Year = {2009},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19107660},
Abstract = {OBJECTIVE: There is good evidence that youth attending
weight loss camps in the UK and US are successful at
achieving weight loss. Limited research suggests improvement
in body image and self-esteem as well. This study evaluated
changes in eight psychosocial variables following
participation in a weight loss camp and examined the role of
gender, age, length of stay, and body mass index (BMI) in
these changes. METHODS: This was an observational and
self-report study of 130 participants (mean age = 12.8; mean
BMI = 33.5; 70% female; 77% Caucasian). The program
consisted of an 1800 kcal/day diet, daily supervised
physical activities, cooking/nutrition classes, and weekly
psycho-educational/support groups led by psychology staff.
Participants completed measures of anti-fat attitudes,
values (e.g., value placed on appearance, athletic ability,
popularity), body- and self-esteem, weight- and
health-related quality of life, self-efficacy, and
depressive symptoms. RESULTS: Participants experienced
significant BMI reduction (average decrease of 7.5 kg
[standard deviation, SD = 4.2] and 2.9 BMI points [SD =
1.4]). Participants also exhibited significant improvements
in body esteem, self-esteem, self-efficacy, generic and
weight-related quality of life, anti-fat attitudes, and the
importance placed on appearance. Changes in self-efficacy,
physical functioning and social functioning remained
significant even after adjusting for initial zBMI, BMI
change, and length of stay. Gender differences were found on
changes in self-efficacy, depressive symptoms, and social
functioning. CONCLUSION: Participation in weight loss
programs in a group setting, such as a camp, may have added
benefit beyond BMI reduction. Greater attention to changes
in psychosocial variables may be warranted when designing
such programs for youth.},
Doi = {10.1080/17477160802613372},
Key = {fds251643}
}
@article{fds251644,
Author = {Miller Johnson and S and Lansford, JE and Costanzo, PR and Malone, PS and Golonka, M and Killeya Jones and LA},
Title = {Early adolescent dating relationships, peer standing, and
risk-taking behaviors},
Journal = {Journal of Early Adolescence},
Volume = {29},
Number = {6},
Pages = {839-861},
Year = {2009},
ISSN = {0272-4316},
Abstract = {This study examined associations among early adolescent
romantic relationships, peer standing, problem behaviors,
and gender as a moderator of these associations, in a sample
of 320 seventh-grade students. Popular and controversial
status youth were more likely to have a romantic partner,
whereas neglected status youth were less likely to have a
romantic partner. Similarly, youth perceived as conventional
and unconventional leaders were also more likely to have a
romantic partner than were non-leaders. Youth who had a
romantic partner drank more alcohol and were more aggressive
than were youth who did not have a romantic partner. Among
those youth who had romantic partners, those who reported
having more deviance-prone partners were themselves more
likely to use alcohol and to be more aggressive, and those
who engaged in deviant behavior with their partners used
more alcohol. However, these associations varied somewhat by
gender. These findings underscore the salience of early
romantic partner relationships in the adjustment of early
adolescents. © 2009 SAGE Publications.},
Doi = {10.1177/0272431609332665},
Key = {fds251644}
}
@article{fds304675,
Author = {Quinlan, NP and Kolotkin, RL and Fuemmeler, BF and Costanzo,
PR},
Title = {Psychosocial outcomes in a weight loss camp for overweight
youth.},
Journal = {Int J Pediatr Obes},
Volume = {4},
Number = {3},
Pages = {134-142},
Year = {2009},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19107660},
Abstract = {OBJECTIVE: There is good evidence that youth attending
weight loss camps in the UK and US are successful at
achieving weight loss. Limited research suggests improvement
in body image and self-esteem as well. This study evaluated
changes in eight psychosocial variables following
participation in a weight loss camp and examined the role of
gender, age, length of stay, and body mass index (BMI) in
these changes. METHODS: This was an observational and
self-report study of 130 participants (mean age = 12.8; mean
BMI = 33.5; 70% female; 77% Caucasian). The program
consisted of an 1800 kcal/day diet, daily supervised
physical activities, cooking/nutrition classes, and weekly
psycho-educational/support groups led by psychology staff.
Participants completed measures of anti-fat attitudes,
values (e.g., value placed on appearance, athletic ability,
popularity), body- and self-esteem, weight- and
health-related quality of life, self-efficacy, and
depressive symptoms. RESULTS: Participants experienced
significant BMI reduction (average decrease of 7.5 kg
[standard deviation, SD = 4.2] and 2.9 BMI points [SD =
1.4]). Participants also exhibited significant improvements
in body esteem, self-esteem, self-efficacy, generic and
weight-related quality of life, anti-fat attitudes, and the
importance placed on appearance. Changes in self-efficacy,
physical functioning and social functioning remained
significant even after adjusting for initial zBMI, BMI
change, and length of stay. Gender differences were found on
changes in self-efficacy, depressive symptoms, and social
functioning. CONCLUSION: Participation in weight loss
programs in a group setting, such as a camp, may have added
benefit beyond BMI reduction. Greater attention to changes
in psychosocial variables may be warranted when designing
such programs for youth.},
Doi = {10.1080/17477160802613372},
Key = {fds304675}
}
@article{fds251634,
Author = {Arredondo, EM and Pollak, K and Costanzo, PR},
Title = {Evaluating a stage model in predicting monolingual
spanish-speaking Latinas' cervical cancer screening
practices: the role of psychosocial and cultural
predictors.},
Journal = {Health Educ Behav},
Volume = {35},
Number = {6},
Pages = {791-805},
Year = {2008},
Month = {December},
ISSN = {1090-1981},
Abstract = {The goals of this study are to evaluate (a) the
effectiveness of a stage model in predicting Latinas'
self-report of obtaining a Pap test and (b) the unique role
of psychosocial/cultural factors in predicting progress
toward behavior change. One-on-one structured interviews
with monolingual Spanish-speaking Latinas (n=190) were
conducted. Most participants (85%) intended to obtain a Pap
smear within 1 year; therefore, staging women based on
intention was not possible. Moreover, results from the
polychotomous hierarchical logistic regression suggest that
psychosocial and cultural factors were independent
predictors of Pap test history. A stage model may not be
appropriate for predicting Pap test screening among Latinas.
Results suggest that unique cultural, psychosocial, and
demographic factors may inhibit cervical cancer screening
practices. Clinicians may need to tailor messages on these
cultural and psychosocial factors to increase Pap testing
among Latinas.},
Doi = {10.1177/1090198107303250},
Key = {fds251634}
}
@article{fds251638,
Author = {Costanzo, PR and Hoy, MB},
Title = {Intergenerational relations: Themes, prospects, and
possibilities},
Journal = {Journal of Social Issues},
Volume = {63},
Number = {4},
Pages = {885-902},
Publisher = {WILEY},
Year = {2007},
Month = {December},
ISSN = {0022-4537},
Abstract = {This commentary provides an examination of the articles
within this issue with a focus on common themes throughout.
Each article is briefly reviewed in the context of how it
contributes to four overarching themes of current
intergenerational research. The articles within this issue
also have implications for developing policy that fosters
intergenerational relationships. This commentary concludes
with a discussion of the complex issues that arise in
creating such policy and utilizes Allport's (1954) "contact
hypothesis" as a framework to guide future policy work
addressing the myriad of issues within the realm of
intergenerational relationships. © 2007 The Society for the
Psychological Study of Social Issues.},
Doi = {10.1111/j.1540-4560.2007.00542.x},
Key = {fds251638}
}
@article{fds251637,
Author = {Killeya-Jones, LA and Costanzo, PR and Malone, P and Quinlan, NP and Miller-Johnson, S},
Title = {Norm-Narrowing and Self- and Other-Perceived Aggression in
Early-Adolescent Same-Sex and Mixed-Sex Cliques.},
Journal = {Journal of school psychology},
Volume = {45},
Number = {5},
Pages = {549-565},
Year = {2007},
Month = {October},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18836510},
Abstract = {We examined the relations between group context and self-
and other-perceptions of aggressive behavior in an
ethnically-diverse sample of 168 male and female grade 7
adolescents. We used self- and peer-reports of aggression in
high- and average-aggressive mixed-sex and same-sex cliques
to examine whether group members would assimilate their
self-report of aggression to the aggression report of their
peers by way of perceived homophily or, conversely, engage
in contrast and see their level of aggression as
comparatively low in the face of high-aggression peers.
Among boys in mixed-sex groups, comparison with
highly-aggressive others resulted in a self-perception of
lower levels of aggression than those perceived by their
peers. Conversely, girls in mixed-sex groups reported their
own levels of aggression to be higher than those perceived
by their peers. We interpret these findings in terms of the
notion of "norm narrowing": rather than being set by the
larger social environment, such as the school, norms are
more narrowly determined within one's immediate peer
group.},
Doi = {10.1016/j.jsp.2007.04.002},
Key = {fds251637}
}
@article{fds251639,
Author = {Costanzo, PR and Malone, PS and Belsky, D and Kertesz, S and Pletcher,
M and Sloan, FA},
Title = {Longitudinal differences in alcohol use in early
adulthood.},
Journal = {Journal of studies on alcohol and drugs},
Volume = {68},
Number = {5},
Pages = {727-737},
Year = {2007},
Month = {September},
ISSN = {1937-1888},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17690807},
Abstract = {<h4>Objective</h4>Research with college populations suggests
that elevated levels of heavy drinking do not generally
persist into later adulthood for most individuals. The aims
of this study were to determine whether this pattern applies
to the population as a whole and to identify those for whom
heavy drinking in early adulthood does lead to continued
high levels of consumption throughout the life
course.<h4>Method</h4>Patterns of heavy drinking were
assessed, and a mixture model was used to evaluate
relationships between psychological profiles and
trajectories of heavy drinking in early to middle adulthood
for race-gender groups. Subjects (N = 5,115; 55% women) were
drawn from the longitudinal study of Coronary Artery Risk
Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) conducted in four major
U.S. cities from 1985 to 1995.<h4>Results</h4>Patterns of
heavy drinking differed by race and gender, with higher
rates observed among whites and men. Heavy drinking was
generally most common in the early 20s and dropped sharply
thereafter. For a subset with psychological profiles
characterized by elevated levels of hostility, anxiety, and
depressive symptoms, high rates of heavy drinking persisted
into later adulthood; 20% of whites and 50% of blacks in the
overall sample were in this subset. Rates of heavy drinking
in this group were similar for blacks and
whites.<h4>Conclusions</h4>At a population level, heavy
drinking in early adulthood tends not to continue into later
life. For a subset of psychologically vulnerable
individuals, however, early adult heavy drinking persists
into the middle adulthood years.},
Doi = {10.15288/jsad.2007.68.727},
Key = {fds251639}
}
@article{fds303795,
Author = {Humphreys, M and Costanzo, P and Haynie, KL and Ostbye, T and Boly, I and Belsky, D and Sloan, F},
Title = {Racial disparities in diabetes a century ago: evidence from
the pension files of US Civil War veterans.},
Journal = {Soc Sci Med},
Volume = {64},
Number = {8},
Pages = {1766-1775},
Year = {2007},
Month = {April},
ISSN = {0277-9536},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17240029},
Abstract = {Using a comprehensive database constructed from the pension
files of US Civil War veterans, we explore characteristics
and occurrence of type 2 diabetes among older black and
white males, living circa 1900. We find that rates of
diagnosed diabetes were much lower among males in this
period than a century later. In contrast to the late 20th
Century, the rates of diagnosed diabetes were lower among
black than among white males, suggesting that the reverse
pattern is of relatively recent origin. Two-thirds of both
white and black veterans had body-mass indexes (BMIs) in the
currently recommended weight range, a far higher proportion
than documented by recent surveys. Longevity among persons
with diabetes was not reduced among Civil War veterans, and
those with diabetes suffered comparatively few sequelae of
the condition. Over 90% of black veterans engaged in low
paying, high-physical effort jobs, as compared to about half
of white veterans. High rates of work-related physical
activity may provide a partial explanation of low rates of
diagnosed diabetes among blacks. We found no evidence of
discrimination in testing by race, as indicated by rates of
examinations in which a urinalysis was performed. This
dataset is valuable for providing a national benchmark
against which to compare modern diabetes prevalence
patterns.},
Doi = {10.1016/j.socscimed.2006.12.004},
Key = {fds303795}
}
@article{fds251636,
Author = {Killeya-Jones, LA and Nakajima, R and Costanzo,
PR},
Title = {Peer standing and substance use in early-adolescent
grade-level networks: a short-term longitudinal
study.},
Journal = {Prevention science : the official journal of the Society for
Prevention Research},
Volume = {8},
Number = {1},
Pages = {11-23},
Year = {2007},
Month = {March},
ISSN = {1389-4986},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17013672},
Abstract = {Two competing hypotheses were tested concerning the
associations between current alcohol and cigarette use and
measures of individual, group and network peer standing in
an ethnically-diverse sample of 156 male and female
adolescents sampled at two time points in the seventh grade.
Findings lent greater support to the person hypothesis, with
early regular substance users enjoying elevated standing
amongst their peers and maintaining this standing regardless
of their maintenance of or desistance from current use later
in the school year. In the fall semester, users (n=20, 13%)
had greater social impact, were described by their peers as
more popular, and were more central to the peer network than
abstainers (i.e., those who did not report current
use).Conversely, in the spring semester, there were no
differences between users (n=22, 13%) and abstainers in peer
ratings of popularity or social impact. Notably, the spring
semester users group retained fewer than half of the users
from the fall semester. Further, students who had reported
current use in the fall, as a group, retained their
positions of elevated peer standing in the spring, compared
to all other students, and continued to be rated by their
peers as more popular and as having greater social impact.
We discuss the findings in terms of the benefit of employing
simultaneous systemic and individual measures of peer
standing or group prominence, which in the case of
peer-based prevention programs, can help clarify the truly
influential from the "pretenders" in the case of diffusion
of risk-related behaviors.},
Doi = {10.1007/s11121-006-0053-2},
Key = {fds251636}
}
@article{fds171473,
Author = {Costanzo, P. and Malone, P. and Belsky, D. and Kertesz, S. and Pletcher, M. and Sloan, F.},
Title = {Longitudinal differences in alcohol use in early
adulthood},
Journal = {Journal of Studies of Alcohol and Drugs},
Volume = {68},
Number = {5},
Pages = {727-737},
Year = {2007},
Key = {fds171473}
}
@article{fds251635,
Author = {Humphreys, M and Costanzo, P and Haynie, K and Ostybe, T and Boly, I and Belsky, D and Sloan, F},
Title = {Racial disparities in diabetes a century ago: Evidence from
pension files of U.S. Civil war veterans},
Journal = {Social Science and Medicine},
Volume = {64},
Number = {8},
Pages = {11-24},
Year = {2007},
ISSN = {0277-9536},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17240029},
Abstract = {Using a comprehensive database constructed from the pension
files of US Civil War veterans, we explore characteristics
and occurrence of type 2 diabetes among older black and
white males, living circa 1900. We find that rates of
diagnosed diabetes were much lower among males in this
period than a century later. In contrast to the late 20th
Century, the rates of diagnosed diabetes were lower among
black than among white males, suggesting that the reverse
pattern is of relatively recent origin. Two-thirds of both
white and black veterans had body-mass indexes (BMIs) in the
currently recommended weight range, a far higher proportion
than documented by recent surveys. Longevity among persons
with diabetes was not reduced among Civil War veterans, and
those with diabetes suffered comparatively few sequelae of
the condition. Over 90% of black veterans engaged in low
paying, high-physical effort jobs, as compared to about half
of white veterans. High rates of work-related physical
activity may provide a partial explanation of low rates of
diagnosed diabetes among blacks. We found no evidence of
discrimination in testing by race, as indicated by rates of
examinations in which a urinalysis was performed. This
dataset is valuable for providing a national benchmark
against which to compare modern diabetes prevalence
patterns.},
Doi = {10.1016/j.socscimed.2006.12.004},
Key = {fds251635}
}
@article{fds251640,
Author = {Friedman, KE and Reichmann, SK and Costanzo, PR and Zelli, A and Ashmore, JA and Musante, GJ},
Title = {Weight stigmatization and ideological beliefs: relation to
psychological functioning in obese adults.},
Journal = {Obes Res},
Volume = {13},
Number = {5},
Pages = {907-916},
Year = {2005},
Month = {May},
ISSN = {1071-7323},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15919845},
Abstract = {OBJECTIVE: This study evaluated the relation among
weight-based stigmatization, ideological beliefs about
weight, and psychological functioning in an obese,
treatment-seeking sample. RESEARCH METHODS AND PROCEDURE:
Ninety-three obese, treatment-seeking adults (24 men and 69
women) completed a battery of self-report questionnaires
measuring psychological adjustment, attitudes about weight,
belief in the controllability of weight, and the frequency
of weight-based stigmatization. RESULTS: Weight-based
stigmatization was a common experience for participants.
Frequency of stigmatizing experiences was positively
associated with depression, general psychiatric symptoms,
and body image disturbance, and negatively associated with
self-esteem. Further, participants' own negative attitudes
about weight problems were associated with their
psychological distress and moderated the relation between
the experience of stigmatization and body image. DISCUSSION:
Weight-based stigmatization is a common experience for obese
individuals seeking weight loss treatment and appears to
contribute to poor mental health adjustment. The negative
effects of these experiences are particularly damaging for
those who hold strong antifat beliefs.},
Doi = {10.1038/oby.2005.105},
Key = {fds251640}
}
@article{fds6829,
Author = {Miller- Johnson and S., Costanzo and P.R.},
Title = {If you can't beat 'em --- induce them to join you: Peer
based interventions during adolescence},
Booktitle = {Developmental Psychopathology: A Festchift in honor of John
Coie},
Publisher = {NY: Cambridge},
Editor = {K. Dodge and J. Kupersmidt},
Year = {2004},
Key = {fds6829}
}
@article{fds251652,
Author = {Miller-Johnson, S and Costanzo, PR and Coie, JD and Rose, MR and Browne,
DC and Johnson, C},
Title = {Peer Social Structure and Risk-Taking Behaviors among
African American Early Adolescents},
Journal = {Journal of Youth and Adolescence},
Volume = {32},
Number = {5},
Pages = {375-384},
Publisher = {Springer Nature America, Inc},
Year = {2003},
Month = {October},
ISSN = {0047-2891},
Abstract = {This study investigated associations between peer status,
peer group social influences, and risk-taking behaviors in
an urban sample of 647 African American seventh-grade
students. The highest rates of problem behaviors were seen
in the controversial peer status group, or those youth who
were both highly liked and highly disliked by other youth.
Findings also revealed contrasting patterns of peer group
leadership. The more conventional, positive leadership style
predicted lower rates, and the less mainstream,
unconventional style predicted higher rates of involvement
in problem behaviors. Conventional leaders were most likely
to be popular status youth, while unconventional leaders
were mostly to be both controversial and popular status
youth. Controversial status youth were also more likely to
be involved in deviant peer groups. Results highlight the
importance of controversial status students as key influence
agents during early adolescence. We discuss the implications
of these results for preventive interventions to reduce
adolescent problem behaviors.},
Doi = {10.1023/A:1024926132419},
Key = {fds251652}
}
@article{fds251653,
Author = {Arredondo, EM and Pollak, KI and Costanzo, P and McNeilly, M and Myers,
E},
Title = {Primary care residents' characteristics and motives for
providing differential medical treatment of cervical cancer
screening},
Journal = {Journal of the National Medical Association},
Volume = {95},
Number = {7},
Pages = {577-584},
Year = {2003},
Month = {July},
Abstract = {Background: Cervical cancer screening rates in the United
States are sub-optimal. Physician factors likely contribute
to these lower rates. Previous studies provide inconclusive
evidence about the association between physician
characteristics and the likelihood of addressing cervical
cancer. This report assesses potential mechanisms that
explain why certain providers do not address cervical cancer
screening, Methods: One hundred primary care residents from
various specialties were asked to indicate the preventive
topics they would address with a hypothetical white female
in her early 20s, who was portrayed as living a "high risk"
lifestyle, and visiting her provider only for acute care
reasons. Results: Among the provider characteristics
assessed, only residents' ethnicity was associated with the
likelihood of and time spent addressing cervical cancer
screening. In particular, Asian-American residents were
least likely to address cervical cancer, while
African-American residents were most likely. A mediation
analyses revealed that perceived barriers for addressing
cervical cancer accounted for this difference. Conclusions:
Study results suggest that there may be cultural factors
among health care providers that may account for
differential referral and treatment practices. Findings from
this study may help identify factors that explain why
cervical cancer screening rates are not higher.},
Key = {fds251653}
}
@article{fds39584,
Author = {P.R. Costanzo and Arrendondo, E. and Pollak, K.I. and McNeilly, M. and Myers,
E.},
Title = {Primary care residents' characteristics and motives for
providing differential medical treatment of cervical cancer
screening},
Journal = {Journal of the National Medical Association},
Volume = {95},
Number = {7},
Pages = {577-585},
Year = {2003},
Key = {fds39584}
}
@article{fds251659,
Author = {P.R. Costanzo and Miller Johnson and S and Costanzo, PR and Coie, J and Browne,
D},
Title = {Peer relations and involvement in problem behaviors among
African-American adolescents},
Journal = {Journal of Youth and Adolescence},
Year = {2003},
Key = {fds251659}
}
@article{fds251621,
Author = {Costanzo, P},
Title = {Social exchange and the developing syntax of moral
orientation.},
Journal = {New directions for child and adolescent development},
Number = {95},
Pages = {41-52},
Year = {2002},
Month = {January},
Doi = {10.1002/cd.36},
Key = {fds251621}
}
@article{fds251657,
Author = {P.R. Costanzo and Friedman, KE and Reichmann, SK and Costanzo, PR and Musante,
GJ},
Title = {Body image partially mediates the relationship between
obesity and psychological distress.},
Journal = {Obes Res},
Volume = {10},
Number = {1},
Pages = {33-41},
Year = {2002},
Month = {January},
ISSN = {1071-7323},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11786599},
Abstract = {OBJECTIVE: Body image is considered as a potential mediator
of the relationship between obesity and psychological
distress. RESEARCH METHODS AND PROCEDURES: One hundred ten
men and women in a residential weight control facility
completed the Multidimensional Body Self-Relations
Questionnaire, the Beck Depression Inventory, the Rosenberg
Self-Esteem Scale, and the Binge Eating Scale. RESULTS: For
both men and women, body-image satisfaction partially
mediated the relationship between degree of overweight and
depression/self-esteem. DISCUSSION: Sociodemographic factors
that may influence the relationships among weight, body
image, and depression/self-esteem are discussed.},
Doi = {10.1038/oby.2002.5},
Key = {fds251657}
}
@article{fds6827,
Author = {Costanzo, P.R.},
Title = {Social exchange and the development of moral orientation in
Children},
Booktitle = {New Directions in Child Development},
Publisher = {NY: Wiley},
Editor = {W. Graziano and B. Laursen},
Year = {2002},
Key = {fds6827}
}
@article{fds251622,
Author = {Pollak, KI and Arredondo, EM and Yarnall, KSH and Lipkus, I and Myers,
E and McNeilly, M and Costanzo, P},
Title = {Influence of stereotyping in smoking cessation counseling by
primary care residents.},
Journal = {Ethn Dis},
Volume = {12},
Number = {4},
Pages = {578-585},
Year = {2002},
ISSN = {1049-510X},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12477145},
Abstract = {This study examined racial differences in primary care
residents' rates of addressing smoking cessation. We
expected residents to have higher rates of addressing
cessation with White female patients as compared with
African-American or Hispanic female patients, due, in part,
to residents having higher outcome expectancies,
self-efficacy, lower barriers, and less reliance on
stereotypes. Residents (N = 90) were an average of 31 years
old; two-thirds were White internal medicine residents.
Residents viewed a video of a lower-middle class White,
African-American, or Hispanic female interacting with her
physician about stomach pain. Results indicate that
residents were very likely to address smoking cessation,
regardless of patients' race. Compared to residents assigned
to an ethnic minority patient, residents assigned to the
White patient were less likely to believe the patient would
follow their advice (P < .03) and also perceived more
barriers to address smoking cessation (P < .04). Reliance on
the stereotype of Whites mediated the racial difference in
outcome expectancies. Implications are that residents may be
relying on stereotypes when they assess lower-middle class
White female patients' receptivity to smoking cessation
advice. Future research on the role of stereotyping in
medical settings is warranted.},
Key = {fds251622}
}
@article{fds251658,
Author = {P.R. Costanzo and Kern, LS and Friedman, KE and Reichmann, SK and Costanzo, PR and Musante, GJ},
Title = {Changing eating behavior: a preliminary study to consider
broader measures of weight control treatment
success.},
Journal = {Eat Behav},
Volume = {3},
Number = {2},
Pages = {113-121},
Year = {2002},
ISSN = {1471-0153},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15001008},
Abstract = {This study evaluated changes in the self-reported eating
behaviors (snacking, binge eating, portion sizes, and meal
skipping) of 52 obese adults (33 women and 19 men) attending
a residential weight loss facility on two consecutive
occasions. For each of the eating patterns studied, subjects
reported engaging in the behavior significantly less
frequently at the time of their return visit. It is proposed
that changes in eating behaviors provide a useful and
appropriate nonweight based outcome measure for estimating
treatment success in diet-seeking clients.},
Doi = {10.1016/s1471-0153(01)00048-4},
Key = {fds251658}
}
@article{fds251660,
Author = {P.R. Costanzo and Arrendondo, E and Pollak, K and Lipkus, I and Myers,
E},
Title = {The influence of patient’s ethnicity on cervical medical
treatment},
Journal = {Journal of the National Medical Association},
Year = {2002},
Key = {fds251660}
}
@article{fds251661,
Author = {P.R. Costanzo and Pollack, K and Arrendondo, EM and Yarnall, KS and Lipkus, I and Myers,
E and McNeilly, M},
Title = {How do residents' prioritize smoking cessation for young
"high-risk" women?},
Journal = {Preventive Medicine},
Volume = {33},
Pages = {292-299},
Year = {2002},
Key = {fds251661}
}
@article{fds251662,
Author = {P.R. Costanzo and Pollack, K and Arrendondo, EM and Yarnall, KS and Lipkus, I and Myers,
E and McNeilly, M},
Title = {Influence of stereotyping on primary care residents' smoking
cessation counseling},
Journal = {Ethnicity and Disease},
Volume = {12},
Pages = {578-585},
Year = {2002},
Key = {fds251662}
}
@article{fds251619,
Author = {Pollak, KI and Arredondo, EM and Yarnall, KS and Lipkus, I and Myers, E and McNeilly, M and Costanzo, P},
Title = {How do residents prioritize smoking cessation for young
"high-risk" women? Factors associated with addressing
smoking cessation.},
Journal = {Prev Med},
Volume = {33},
Number = {4},
Pages = {292-299},
Year = {2001},
Month = {October},
ISSN = {0091-7435},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11570833},
Abstract = {BACKGROUND: Sixty-seven percent of physicians report
advising their smoking patients to quit. Primary care
residents' priorities for preventive health for a young
"high-risk" female are unknown. Factors related to residents
addressing smoking also need examining. METHODS: One hundred
residents completed a survey about preventive health issues
for a woman in her 20s "who leads a high-risk lifestyle."
Residents indicated which topics they would address, and the
likelihood that they would address each of 12 relevant
preventive health topics, their outcome expectancies that
the patient would follow their advice on each topic, their
confidence that they could address the topic, and perceived
barriers for addressing the topic. RESULTS: Residents listed
STD prevention most frequently. Drug use and smoking
cessation were second and third most frequently listed.
Residents who believed that the patient would follow their
advice were more likely to list smoking cessation than
residents who had lower outcome expectancies for that
patient. Higher barriers were negatively related to
addressing smoking cessation. CONCLUSIONS: When time is not
a barrier, residents are likely to address smoking
cessation. Teaching residents how to incorporate this
subject into their clinical practice is needed. Raising
residents' outcome expectancies may increase their
likelihood of addressing smoking cessation.},
Doi = {10.1006/pmed.2001.0884},
Key = {fds251619}
}
@article{fds251655,
Author = {P.R. Costanzo and Costanzo, PR and Reichmann, SK and Friedman, KE and Musante,
GJ},
Title = {The mediating effect of eating self-efficacy on the
relationship between emotional arousal and overeating in the
treatment-seeking obese.},
Journal = {Eat Behav},
Volume = {2},
Number = {4},
Pages = {363-368},
Year = {2001},
ISSN = {1471-0153},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15001029},
Abstract = {In this study, we tested the proposition that the
emotion-based eating of obese individuals is mediated by the
effects of emotional arousal tendencies on brittle dieting
self-restraint. Our indices of emotion-aroused eating,
overeating, and brittle restraint were derived from a set of
measures administered to 632 female and 254 male
participants in a residential weight control and lifestyle
change program. Mediation analyses indicated that (a) the
relationship between positive emotion and overeating was
entirely mediated by restraint tendencies and (b) the
relationship between negative emotion eating and overeating
was only partially mediated by brittle restraint. These
findings held for both males and females. The results are
discussed in relation to the viability of the psychosomatic
hypothesis for understanding the relationship between
emotions and overeating.},
Doi = {10.1016/s1471-0153(01)00042-3},
Key = {fds251655}
}
@article{fds251620,
Author = {Costanzo, PR and Musante, GJ and Friedman, KE and Kern, LS and Tomlinson, K},
Title = {The gender specificity of emotional, situational, and
behavioral indicators of binge eating in a diet-seeking
obese population.},
Journal = {Int J Eat Disord},
Volume = {26},
Number = {2},
Pages = {205-210},
Year = {1999},
Month = {September},
ISSN = {0276-3478},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10422610},
Abstract = {OBJECTIVE: This study investigated the unique gender
correlates of binge eating severity in a diet-seeking
population. METHOD: This sample consisted of 288
self-admitted patients enrolled in a residential weight loss
program between 1996 and 1997. Subjects were administered
several questionnaires including (a) the Binge Eating Scale,
(b) the Beck Depression Inventory, (c) the Rosenberg
Self-Esteem Scale, (d) 5-point scales of eating related
foci, and (e) 7-point scales of subject confidence in
controlling their eating under various circumstances. Data
were analyzed in terms of stepwise regression analyses.
RESULTS: Regression results revealed that while men and
women share some common predictors of binge eating severity,
there are also some gender-specific correlates. Men in our
sample were prone to binge eat because of negative emotions
(i.e., depression and anger), while binge eating severity
for women in our sample was most strongly related to diet
failure and tests of moderate eating. DISCUSSION: The
strength of the distinctive gender-specific regressions for
binge eating severity suggests that the problems of binging
in obese males and females are derivatives of differential
sex role expectations. This interpretation and clinical
implications are the focus of the discussion.},
Doi = {10.1002/(sici)1098-108x(199909)26:2<205::aid-eat10>3.0.co;2-},
Key = {fds251620}
}
@article{fds251654,
Author = {P.R. Costanzo and Costanzo, PR and Musante, G and Freidman, M and Kern, L and Tomlinson,
K},
Title = {The gender specificity of emotional, situational, and
behavioral indicators of binge-eating},
Journal = {International Journal of Eating Disorders},
Volume = {23},
Pages = {65-75},
Year = {1999},
Key = {fds251654}
}
@article{fds251618,
Author = {Putallaz, M and Costanzo, PR and Grimes, CL and Sherman,
DM},
Title = {Intergenerational continuities and their influences on
children's social development},
Journal = {Social Development},
Volume = {7},
Number = {3},
Pages = {389-427},
Year = {1998},
Month = {January},
Abstract = {The purpose of this article is to provide a comprehensive
review of the recent efforts by psychologists to explore
intergenerational continuities and their influences on
children's social development. A primary criterion for
inclusion in the review was use of three generations of
subjects represented in the research, although two
generation studies were included to supplement or expand
upon the conclusions drawn from three generation studies.
The following domains of research were reviewed: (1)
literature regarding the repetition of child abuse across
generations, (2) research examining the intergenerational
continuity of attachment status, (3) investigations of the
continuity of parenting and childrearing behavior parents
experienced with their own parents, (4) research examining
inter generational continuities in parenting involving
non-human primates, and (5) investigations of
intergenerational continuities in both peer and sibling
relationships. Across all literatures reviewed, evidence was
found for intergenerational continuity with gender of parent
affecting results. Two primary mechanisms for transmission
appear to be cognitive schemas of relationships and
modeling. A paradigm is proposed describing possible means
of intergenerational transmission of influence on the social
development of children.},
Doi = {10.1111/1467-9507.00074},
Key = {fds251618}
}
@article{fds251648,
Author = {P.R. Costanzo and Musante, GJ and Costanzo, PR and Friedman, KE},
Title = {The comorbidity of depression and eating dysregulation
processes in a diet-seeking obese population: a matter of
gender specificity.},
Journal = {Int J Eat Disord},
Volume = {23},
Number = {1},
Pages = {65-75},
Year = {1998},
Month = {January},
ISSN = {0276-3478},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9429920},
Abstract = {OBJECTIVE: To explore gender differences in depression
vulnerability among an obese, treatment-seeking population
and to discern those components of eating-related phenomena
that discriminate the depression-comorbid obese from their
noncomorbid counterparts. METHOD: This sample consisted of
1,184 self-admitted patients enrolled in a residential
weight loss program between 1990 and 1995. Subjects were
administered several questionnaires including (a) the Beck
Depression Inventory, (b) 5-point scales of eating-related
foci, and (c) 7-point scales of subject's confidence in
their eating control under various circumstances. Data were
analyzed via analyses of variance (ANOVAs) and stepwise
regression. RESULTS: Greater depression was accompanied by
more disruptive, dysregulatory eating tendencies, and
stronger inclination to engage in affectively and socially
disrupted eating. Regression results revealed
gender-specific predictors of comorbid depression. For obese
females, negative-emotion disrupted eating and binge-purge
behaviors were prominent predictors of depression. For
males, eating induced by experiences of social or physical
inadequacy and fasting relating to eating behaviors were the
depression-relevant variables. DISCUSSION: These results are
discussed in terms of their theoretical implications for
gender-mediated models of obesity-depression comorbidity,
and in terms of their clinical significance.},
Doi = {10.1002/(sici)1098-108x(199801)23:1<65::aid-eat8>3.0.co;2-#},
Key = {fds251648}
}
@article{fds38472,
Author = {M. Putallaz and P.R. Costanzo and C. Grimes and D.
Lipton},
Title = {Intergenerational influences on children's social
development.},
Journal = {Social Development},
Volume = {7},
Number = {3},
Pages = {390-427},
Year = {1998},
Key = {fds38472}
}
@article{fds251651,
Author = {Musante, G and Costanzo, PR and Freidman, K},
Title = {The commorbidity of depression and eating disregulation in a
diet-seeking obese population: A matter of gender
specificity},
Journal = {International Journal of Eating Disorders},
Volume = {23},
Number = {1},
Pages = {65-77},
Year = {1998},
Key = {fds251651}
}
@article{fds251631,
Author = {March, JS and Amaya-Jackson, L and Terry, R and Costanzo,
P},
Title = {Posttraumatic symptomatology in children and adolescents
after an industrial fire.},
Journal = {J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry},
Volume = {36},
Number = {8},
Pages = {1080-1088},
Year = {1997},
Month = {August},
ISSN = {0890-8567},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9256587},
Abstract = {OBJECTIVE: This investigation evaluated the extent and
nature of posttraumatic symptomatology (PTS) in children and
adolescents 9 months after an industrial fire at the
imperial Foods chicken-processing plant in Hamlet, North
Carolina, caused extensive loss of life. METHOD: Using a PTS
self-report measure plus self- and teacher reports of
comorbid symptoms the authors surveyed 1,019 fourth- to
ninth-grade students in the community where the fire
occurred. RESULTS: Three factors comprising PTS were
identified: reexperiencing, avoidance and hyperarousal.
Reexperiencing and avoidance were positively correlated;
hyperarousal proved weakly correlated with reexperiencing,
perhaps because exposure was largely indirect. Using a T
score cutoff of 65 on the reexperiencing factor as
indicative of PTS 9.7% of subjects met criteria for PTS;
11.9% met criteria for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
using DSM-III-R PTSD criteria. Degree of exposure was the
most powerful predictor of PTS. Race (African-American) and
gender (female) posed significant risk factors for PTS.
Self-reported internalizing symptoms and teacher-reported
externalizing symptoms were positively predicted by
intercurrent PTS, and independently of PTS, by degree of
exposure. Comorbid symptoms showed interesting interactions
with exposure, race, and gender. Lack of self-attributed
personal efficacy predicted PTS but did not moderate the
effects of race or gender on PTS risk. CONCLUSIONS: This
study, which used a population-based sampling strategy,
strengthens and extends findings from earlier literature on
pediatric PTSD in showing that (1) PTS and comorbid
internalizing and externalizing symptoms rise in direct
proportion to degree of exposure; (2) gender and race show
variable effects on risk for PTS and comorbid symptoms; and
(3) comorbid symptoms are positively correlated with PTS and
may represent primary outcomes of traumatic exposure in
their own right.},
Doi = {10.1097/00004583-199708000-00015},
Key = {fds251631}
}
@article{fds39586,
Author = {P.R. Costanzo and March, J.S. and Amaya-Jackson, L. and Terry,
R.},
Title = {Post-Traumatic symptomatology in children and adolescents
following an industrial fire in Hamlet, North
Carolina},
Journal = {Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry},
Volume = {36},
Pages = {1080-1088},
Year = {1997},
Key = {fds39586}
}
@article{fds251650,
Author = {March, JS and Amaya Jackson and L and Costanzo, PR and Terry,
R},
Title = {Post-Traumatic symptomatology in children and adolescents
following an industrial fire in Hamlet, North
Carolina},
Journal = {Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry},
Volume = {36},
Pages = {1080-1088},
Year = {1997},
Key = {fds251650}
}
@article{fds251649,
Author = {Wilson, J and Costanzo, PR},
Title = {A preliminary study of attachment attention and schizotypy
in early adulthood},
Journal = {Journal of of Social and Clinical Psychology},
Volume = {15},
Number = {2},
Pages = {231-260},
Publisher = {Guilford Publications},
Year = {1996},
Abstract = {Both heritable neurocognitive impairments and interpersonal
stressors are widely thought to be involved in the etiology
of schizophrenia spectrum disorders. In this exploratory
study, we measured attachment (as an index of chronic
interpersonal stress) and schizotypal tendencies in 273
young adults. Of these participants, 57 also completed an
adaptive-rate Continuous Performance Test, which measured
ability to sustain attention (as an index of neurocognitive
functioning). Psychometric properties of our measures and
the relationships between attachment, attention, and
schizotypy were then examined. Our analyses confirmed the
usefulness of the classical trichotomous division of
attachment into secure, avoidant, and anxious-ambivalent
styles, as well as the presence of two dimensions of
schizotypy underlying positive and negative (anhedonic)
symptomatology. Four findings are central to our
investigation. First, secure attachment was associated with
low positive and low negative schizotypy; anxious attachment
was associated with positive schizotypy, and avoidant
attachment was associated with both positive and negative
schizotypy. Second, when both negative and positive
schizotypy were heightened, attentional performance was
lowered. Third, no relationship between attachment and
attention emerged. Fourth, attentional performance and
attachment interacted to predict negative schizotypy, such
that the presence of either good attentional performance or
good attachment processes buffered individuals from
anhedonia. Although methodological limitations qualify our
findings, we suggest that, consistent with the
diathesis-stress model of schizophrenia, future exploration
of interactions between interpersonal and neurocognitive
measures may provide important leads in both developmental
psychopathology and normative development.},
Doi = {10.1521/jscp.1996.15.2.231},
Key = {fds251649}
}
@article{fds6087,
Author = {P.R. Costanzo and Costanzo, P. R. and Miller-Johnson, S. and Wencel,
H.},
Title = {Social developmental contributions to the study of childhood
anxiety disorders: Emerging perspectives},
Booktitle = {Handbook of Childhood Anxiety},
Publisher = {New York: Guilford Press},
Editor = {J. March},
Year = {1995},
Key = {fds6087}
}
@article{fds251656,
Author = {P.R. Costanzo and Thompson, E and Boggiano, A and Costanzo, PR and Matter, J and Ruble,
D},
Title = {Age related changes in children's orientation to strategic
peer interaction},
Journal = {Social Cognition},
Year = {1995},
Key = {fds251656}
}
@article{fds251663,
Author = {P.R. Costanzo and Wilson, J},
Title = {Attachment, attention and schizotypy: Converging measures
and connections},
Journal = {Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology},
Year = {1995},
Key = {fds251663}
}
@article{fds251664,
Author = {P.R. Costanzo and Putallaz, M and Klein, TP and Efron, LA},
Title = {Intergenerational and temporal continuities in peer
relationships},
Journal = {Social Development},
Year = {1995},
Key = {fds251664}
}
@article{fds321834,
Author = {Putallaz, M and Klein, TP and Costanzo, PR and Hedges,
LA},
Title = {Relating mothers' social framing to their children's entry
competence with peers},
Journal = {Social Development},
Volume = {3},
Number = {3},
Pages = {222-237},
Publisher = {WILEY},
Year = {1994},
Month = {January},
Abstract = {The purpose of this study was to examine how mothers view
and construct meaning their children's social interactions,
and to understand the interpretive frames they bring to
filtering the social world and conveying meaning to their
children. Maternal narrations to their children' videotaped
entry behavior revealed narration patterns related to their
children' entry behavior and the group's response.
Generally, when their children were behaving competently,
mothers appeared to have a broad based, context embedded
view of the interaction, but focused more specifially when
difficulties arose, These narration patterns were influenced
ny the mothers' own remembered childhood social competence
and recollections of positive and anxious peer experiences.
Implications of these results for the socialization process
were discussed. Copyright © 1994, Wiley Blackwell. All
rights reserved},
Doi = {10.1111/j.1467-9507.1994.tb00042.x},
Key = {fds321834}
}
@article{fds251616,
Author = {Costanzo, PR and Siegel, AW},
Title = {Social Context, Social Behavior, and Socialization:
Investigating the Child′s Developing Organization of the
Behavioral Field},
Journal = {Journal of Experimental Child Psychology},
Volume = {55},
Number = {2},
Pages = {127-130},
Publisher = {Elsevier BV},
Year = {1993},
Month = {April},
ISSN = {0022-0965},
Doi = {10.1006/jecp.1993.1006},
Key = {fds251616}
}
@article{fds321835,
Author = {Putallaz, M and Costanzo, PR and Smith, RB},
Title = {Maternal recollections of childhood peer relationships:
Implications for their children's social
competence},
Journal = {Journal of Social and Personal Relationships},
Volume = {8},
Number = {3},
Pages = {403-422},
Publisher = {SAGE Publications},
Year = {1991},
Month = {January},
Abstract = {The relations between mothers’ recollections of their
childhood peer relationships and their child-rearing
intentions, parenting behaviors and their preschoolers’
social competence were examined. Mothers with predominantly
anxious/lonely peer recollections appeared to take the most
active role in their children's social development and had
the most socially competent children as compared to mothers
reporting either predominantly positive or negative peer
recollections. This pat- tern of effects was influenced by
the sex of the child. Implications of these results for a
gender-moderated model of socialization were discussed. ©
1991, Sage Publications. All rights reserved.},
Doi = {10.1177/0265407591083006},
Key = {fds321835}
}
@article{fds251617,
Author = {Woody, EZ and Costanzo, PR},
Title = {Does marital agony precede marital ecstasy? A comment on
Gottman and Krokoff's "Marital interaction and satisfaction:
a longitudinal view".},
Journal = {Journal of consulting and clinical psychology},
Volume = {58},
Number = {4},
Pages = {499-501},
Publisher = {American Psychological Association (APA)},
Year = {1990},
Month = {August},
ISSN = {0022-006X},
Abstract = {In a recent article, Gottman and Krokoff (1989) presented a
fascinating and counterintuitive portrayal of a temporally
related dynamic relationship of marital conflict and marital
satisfaction. Unfortunately the results from which their
conclusions spring are quite problematic. In a 2-wave,
extreme-groups design, Gottman and Krokoff used raw change
in satisfaction as a correlate of Time 1 conflict variables
for purposes of analysis. Serious psychometric questions
arise with this approach to the causal assessment of change.
Given the considerations raised, there is a high likelihood
that Gottman and Krokoff's data result from statistical
artifact. Alternative approaches to the measurement of
change are discussed in the context of illustrating the
problematic components of Gottman and Krokoff's
analysis.},
Doi = {10.1037/0022-006x.58.4.499},
Key = {fds251617}
}
@article{fds251614,
Author = {WARWICK, ZS and COSTANZO, PR and GILL, JM and SCHIFFMAN,
SS},
Title = {Eating Restraint, Presentation Order, and Time of Day Are
Related to Sweet Taste Preferences},
Journal = {Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences},
Volume = {575},
Number = {1},
Pages = {588-591},
Publisher = {WILEY},
Year = {1989},
Month = {January},
ISSN = {0077-8923},
Doi = {10.1111/j.1749-6632.1989.tb53305.x},
Key = {fds251614}
}
@article{fds251615,
Author = {Costanzo, PR and Schiffman, SS},
Title = {Thinness--not obesity--has a genetic component.},
Journal = {Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews},
Volume = {13},
Number = {1},
Pages = {55-58},
Year = {1989},
Month = {January},
ISSN = {0149-7634},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2671834},
Abstract = {The body mass of adoptees was compared with the body mass of
both biologic and adoptive parents using data from the
Danish Adoption Register. Chi-square analyses revealed that
biologic heritability is small and is confined to thin, not
obese body mass. It is probable that the inheritance of thin
body mass constitutes a mild protective factor that
mitigates against development of obesity caused by
environmental factors.},
Doi = {10.1016/s0149-7634(89)80052-1},
Key = {fds251615}
}
@article{fds251612,
Author = {Woody, EZ and Costanzo, PR and Liefer, H and Conger,
J},
Title = {The effects of taste and caloric perceptions on the eating
behavior of restrained and unrestrained subjects},
Journal = {Cognitive Therapy and Research},
Volume = {5},
Number = {4},
Pages = {381-390},
Publisher = {Springer Nature},
Year = {1981},
Month = {December},
ISSN = {0147-5916},
Abstract = {The present study explored the phenomenon of
counterregulatory eating in chronic dieters by manipulating
taste and caloric-information cues of a preload and taste of
subsequent ad lib food. The results replicated the
"restraint breaking" phenomenon reported by Herman and Mack
(1975) and supported the hypothesis that this behavioral
pattern is cognitively mediated. In addition, sensitivity to
taste was found in restrained subjects when their chronic
restraints were bypassed. These results were related to
previous eating research, and their implications for
self-control and dieting were examined. © 1981 Plenum
Publishing Corporation.},
Doi = {10.1007/BF01173690},
Key = {fds251612}
}
@article{fds251613,
Author = {Coie, JD and Costanzo, PR and Cox, GB},
Title = {Behavioral determinants of mental illness concerns: a
comparison of community subcultures.},
Journal = {American journal of community psychology},
Volume = {8},
Number = {5},
Pages = {537-555},
Year = {1980},
Month = {October},
ISSN = {0091-0562},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7424839},
Abstract = {A stratified sample (race, sex, and social class) of 469
laymen from two North Carolina communities responded to a
190-item MMPI-based questionnaire with the degree of mental
illness concern evoked by each item. The results reflected
systematic race and social class differences in the
behavioral bases for mental illness attributions--differences
not explainable by overall differences in toleration for
deviance. Although laymen had roughly similar rank orderings
for the 13 homogeneous clusters of items, blacks indicated
greater concern over breakdowns in social orientation than
whites, while the opposite pattern held for traditionally
defined psychopathy (internal distresses). Upper-class
concerns were, comparatively, with cognitive dysfunction,
middle-class with moral and social responsibility, and
lower-class with social inadequacies.},
Doi = {10.1007/bf00912591},
Key = {fds251613}
}
@article{fds251611,
Author = {Conger, JC and Conger, AJ and Costanzo, PR and Wright, KL and Matter,
JA},
Title = {The effect of social cues on the eating behavior of obese
and normal subjects.},
Journal = {Journal of personality},
Volume = {48},
Number = {2},
Pages = {258-271},
Year = {1980},
Month = {June},
Abstract = {Schachter's externality hypothesis suggests that overweight
individuals are more likely to be induced to eat by salient
external cues than normal weight individuals. While a range
of studies have demonstrated the plausibility of this
hypothesis in the case of sensory stimuli (e.g., taste
cues), there is little evidence that the hypothesis applies
to social stimuli. The current study examines this latter
proposition by exposing male and female, overweight and
normal weight subjects to a same-sex or opposite-sex peer
model. Under the guise of engaging in a taste experiment,
the subjects were either exposed to a model who tasted no
crackers (no eat), one cracker (low eat), or twenty crackers
(high eat). In addition, control model-absent conditions
were also run for purposes of establishing baseline eating
rates. If the externality hypotheses were to prevail in
social domains, one would expect overweight subjects to be
more prone to model the cracker-eating behavior of the peer
than normal weight individuals. However, the findings
indicate that all subject groups regardless of weight
evidence a rather clear modeling effect and all subjects
evidence social inhibition effects on their eating behavior
as well. Several intriguing interactions among subject sex,
model sex, subject weight, and social condition were also
found. The discussion explores the relevance of an
externality model of overweight eating in social domains,
and focuses upon the interesting and somewhat distinct
pattern of socially mediated eating exhibited by overweight
females.},
Doi = {10.1111/j.1467-6494.1980.tb00832.x},
Key = {fds251611}
}
@article{fds251609,
Author = {Alexander, IE and Costanzo, PR},
Title = {Death anxiety, dissent, and competence.},
Journal = {Journal of personality},
Volume = {47},
Number = {4},
Pages = {734-751},
Year = {1979},
Month = {December},
Abstract = {A total of 64 male undergraduates were administered a
multistage interview which was structured to assess (a)
their level of overtly expressed death anxiety, (b) covert
(GSR) arousal to death stimuli (c) self-perceived
competence, and (d) agreement with or dissent from life
threatening national policies. The analyses that followed
were concerned with examining the relationships among these
variables. In previous studies of this kind it had been
typically found that (1) self-perceived competence and
magnitude of expressed death concern are inversely related
and (2) overt expressions of death concern and covert
physiological arousal to death cues are inversely related.
Psychodynamic formulations centering on the ego-defensive
nature of inhibited expressions of death anxiety have been
cited to explain these past data. The current investigation
proposed that the magnitude of expressed death concern would
bear an inverse relationship to both felt competence and
covert death arousal only when the level of overt concern
was not contingent upon the individual's attitudes
concerning the imminence of real life threatening
circumstances in the environment. The rationale behind these
predictions inheres in the notion that the neurotic
components of strongly expressed death anxiety derive from
its lack of anchoring in "real" external threats.
Conversely, the expression of low death fear can only be
regarded as "defensive" when real threats are perceived and
acknowledged. The obtained results strongly support this
rationale and the discussion centers on the impact of social
conditions on psychodynamic processes.},
Doi = {10.1111/j.1467-6494.1979.tb00218.x},
Key = {fds251609}
}
@article{fds251610,
Author = {Costanzo, PR and Woody, EZ},
Title = {Externality as a function of obesity in children: pervasive
style or eating-specific attribute?},
Journal = {Journal of personality and social psychology},
Volume = {37},
Number = {12},
Pages = {2286-2296},
Year = {1979},
Month = {December},
ISSN = {0022-3514},
Abstract = {The developmental sources of the link between stylistic
externality and food-related externality found in the obese
by Schacter and others were explored by testing whether the
externality phenomena that have been found to differentiate
obese and normal adults are also discriminators of obese and
normal children. The results suggest that obese children as
young as 7-12 years of age show an external responsiveness
to salient food cues but not yet a generally external
perceptual style. The implications of these findings for the
development of obese externality are examined.},
Doi = {10.1037//0022-3514.37.12.2286},
Key = {fds251610}
}
@article{fds322494,
Author = {Lakin, M and Lakin, MG and Costanzo, PR},
Title = {Group processes in early childhood: A dimension of human
development},
Journal = {International Journal of Behavioral Development},
Volume = {2},
Number = {2},
Pages = {171-183},
Publisher = {SAGE Publications},
Year = {1979},
Month = {January},
Abstract = {A family-centered view of socialization has dominated child
development research literature. Particularly lacking is
knowledge of the influences of group participation where it
is available and encouraged. The investigators carried out
an observational field study in group optimizing settings in
Israel. Variables were age and setting and the study
included 32 groups of children aged 11-31 divided among four
age categories in two types of communal settlement with
differing amounts of group exposure. Differences in group
behaviors were primarily related to developmental level but
setting effects were apparent. The implications of such
early appearances of group behaviors are considered. ©
1979, Sage Publications. All rights reserved.},
Doi = {10.1177/016502547900200205},
Key = {fds322494}
}
@article{fds251601,
Author = {Cox, G and Costanzo, PR and Coie, JD},
Title = {A survey instrument for the assessment of popular
conceptions of mental illness.},
Journal = {Journal of consulting and clinical psychology},
Volume = {44},
Number = {6},
Pages = {901-909},
Year = {1976},
Month = {December},
ISSN = {0022-006X},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/993428},
Doi = {10.1037//0022-006x.44.6.901},
Key = {fds251601}
}
@article{fds251608,
Author = {Coie, JD and Costanzo, PR and Cox, G},
Title = {Behavioral determinants of mental illness concerns: a
comparison of "gatekeeper" professions.},
Journal = {Journal of consulting and clinical psychology},
Volume = {43},
Number = {5},
Pages = {626-636},
Year = {1975},
Month = {October},
ISSN = {0022-006X},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1176676},
Doi = {10.1037//0022-006x.43.5.626},
Key = {fds251608}
}
@article{fds251607,
Author = {Costanzo, PR and Grumet, JF and Brehm, SS},
Title = {The effects of choice and source of constraint on children's
attributions of preference},
Journal = {Journal of Experimental Social Psychology},
Volume = {10},
Number = {4},
Pages = {352-364},
Publisher = {Elsevier BV},
Year = {1974},
Month = {January},
ISSN = {0022-1031},
Abstract = {One hundred and twenty female children (40 each from the
first, third, and sixth grades) were presented with
videotaped presentations of a female child choosing between
two toys. Depending upon condition, subjects then viewed the
actor either playing with her initially preferred toy
(Unconstrained choice) or being forced to play with her
initially non-preferred toy (Constrained choice).
Additionally, the source of the actor's freedom or
constraint was represented as either adult mediated or
environmentally mediated. All subjects rated the actor's
liking for each of the toys, how much the actor wanted to
play with each toy, and which toy the actor would choose to
take home with her. The two major findings which emerged
were: (1) Contrary to prediction, children of all three age
levels tended to use cues reflecting both the actor's choice
and the actor's behavior in inferring her liking for each of
the toys. (2) As predicted, the degree to which observers'
attributions of toy liking corresponded to inferred attitude
of the adult (who either approved or prohibited the actor's
choice) was an inverse function of age. The similarities
between the findings of this study and the data from studies
of adult attitude attribution and children's moral
attributions are considered in the discussion. ©
1974.},
Doi = {10.1016/0022-1031(74)90031-6},
Key = {fds251607}
}
@article{fds251605,
Author = {Coie, JD and Costanzo, PR and Farnill, D},
Title = {Specific transitions in the development of spatial
perspective-taking ability},
Journal = {Developmental Psychology},
Volume = {9},
Number = {2},
Pages = {167-177},
Publisher = {American Psychological Association (APA)},
Year = {1973},
Month = {September},
ISSN = {0012-1649},
Abstract = {90 5-11 yr olds were tested on 2 variations of Piaget's
spatial perspective task. The predominance of each of 4
kinds of spatial errors (interposition, aspect, distance,
and right-left) was found to be differentially related both
to age and overall task performance. The significance of
this developmental sequence and the method of error analysis
employed are discussed in the context of the earlier work of
Piaget and B. Inhelder. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2006
APA, all rights reserved). © 1973 American Psychological
Association.},
Doi = {10.1037/h0035062},
Key = {fds251605}
}
@article{fds251606,
Author = {Wortman, CB and Costanzo, PR and Witt, TR},
Title = {Effect of anticipated performance on the attributions of
causality to self and others.},
Journal = {Journal of personality and social psychology},
Volume = {27},
Number = {3},
Pages = {372-381},
Year = {1973},
Month = {September},
ISSN = {0022-3514},
Abstract = {Required 40 senior high school boys to take a test of social
perceptiveness containing 5 sample and 10 official
questions. Half of the Ss were led to do well on the sample
questions, while half were led to do poorly. Half of the Ss
anticipated continuing with the official questions, while
half did not. In addition, all Ss were faced with a
successful other. Ss were asked to make causal attributions
to both themselves and to the other. Consistent with
previous research, Ss who failed assigned causality for
their performance to external factors. They also viewed
themselves as less motivated and the task as less important
than successful Ss. As predicted, Ss who anticipated future
performance attributed significantly less ability to
themselves than Ss who did not. In addition, they viewed the
task as more difficult and their resources as less adequate
than Ss in the nonanticipation condition. While
success-failure and anticipation-nonanticipation produced
strong effects on self-attribution, they had relatively
little impact on the Ss' attributions about a successful
other. (19 ref.) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2006 APA, all
rights reserved). © 1973 American Psychological
Association.},
Doi = {10.1037/h0034949},
Key = {fds251606}
}
@article{fds251604,
Author = {Costanzo, PR and Coie, JD and Grumet, JF and Farnill,
D},
Title = {A reexamination of the effects of intent and consequence on
children's moral judgments.},
Journal = {Child development},
Volume = {44},
Number = {1},
Pages = {154-161},
Year = {1973},
Month = {March},
ISSN = {0009-3920},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/4706063},
Doi = {10.1111/j.1467-8624.1973.tb02127.x},
Key = {fds251604}
}
@article{fds322495,
Author = {Margulis, ST and Costanzo, PR and Klein, AL},
Title = {Impression change and favorableness of first impressions: A
study of population and of commitment effects},
Journal = {Psychonomic Science},
Volume = {22},
Number = {6},
Pages = {318-320},
Publisher = {Springer Nature},
Year = {1971},
Month = {January},
Abstract = {The present study replicated and extended Briscoe, Woodyard,
& Shaw’s (1967) study of impression formation. The
replication yielded overall recency effects and did not find
that initially unfavorable first impressions were more
resistant to change. This failure to replicate was not due
to initial differences in impressions and was attributed to
hypothesized population differences. The extension, on
commitment, indicated that commitment was greatest for Ss
who made covert initial ratings and least for those who made
public initial ratings. The commitment effects were related
to Kiesler’s (1968) commitment theory. © 1971,
Psychonomic Journals, Inc.. All rights reserved.},
Doi = {10.3758/BF03332600},
Key = {fds322495}
}
@article{fds251602,
Author = {Costanzo, PR},
Title = {Conformity development as a function of self-blame.},
Journal = {Journal of personality and social psychology},
Volume = {14},
Number = {4},
Pages = {366-374},
Year = {1970},
Month = {April},
ISSN = {0022-3514},
Abstract = {Administered a self-blame scale devised by the author to 490
Ss from 4 age levels ranging from 7-21. From this
population, 144 Ss were selected: 12 high-blame, 12
middle-blame, and 12 low-blame Ss from each age group.
Conformity score was computed as the frequency with which
the selected Ss conformed to the erroneous line judgments of
a simulated peer majority in the R. S. Crutchfield (see
30:2) situation. Findings suggest that self-blame and
conformity are highly interrelated processes. Conformity was
also found to be related to a self-blame minus other-blame
score. Relationships among conformity, self-blame,
self-esteem, and peer orientation are discussed. (PsycINFO
Database Record (c) 2006 APA, all rights reserved). © 1970
American Psychological Association.},
Doi = {10.1037/h0028983},
Key = {fds251602}
}
@article{fds251603,
Author = {Costanzo, FS and Markel, NN and Costanzo, PR},
Title = {Voice quality profile and perceived emotion},
Journal = {Journal of Counseling Psychology},
Volume = {16},
Number = {3},
Pages = {267-270},
Publisher = {American Psychological Association (APA)},
Year = {1969},
Month = {May},
ISSN = {0022-0167},
Abstract = {Obtained speech samples by having 23 students read
paragraphs indicating anger, contempt, indifference, love,
and grief. A "test passage" was embedded in each paragraph.
44 students listened to the test passages and judged which 1
of the 5 emotions was being portrayed. 7 students rated the
test passages for pitch, loudness, and tempo; each voice was
then classified as peak pitch, loudness, or tempo.
Statistical analysis indicated that peak-pitch voices were
judged as portraying grief; peak loudness as anger or
contempt, and peak tempo as indifference. It is suggested
that the 3 voice quality profiles represent 3 modes of
interpersonal orientation, and that they are a behavioral
link between transitory emotional states and stable
personality dispositions. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2006
APA, all rights reserved). © 1969 American Psychological
Association.},
Doi = {10.1037/h0027355},
Key = {fds251603}
}
@article{fds331137,
Author = {Goldman, J and Costanzo, PR and Lehrke, SA},
Title = {Semantic satiation as a function of type of
associate},
Journal = {Psychonomic Science},
Volume = {12},
Number = {6},
Pages = {267-268},
Publisher = {Springer Nature},
Year = {1968},
Month = {January},
Abstract = {This study investigated the relative strength of verbal
association in common verbal associates, semantic space
verbal associates, and non-associates. Repetition-satiation
inhibition procedures were used in the test period. It was
found that common associates and semantic space associates
show equivalent inhibition effects and both showed
significantly less inhibition than non-associates.
Interference in the form of noise during repetition did not
significantly affect the course of inhibition. © 1968,
Psychonomic Journals. All rights reserved.},
Doi = {10.3758/BF03331303},
Key = {fds331137}
}
@article{fds322496,
Author = {Costanzo, PR and Reitan, HT and Shaw, ME},
Title = {Conformity as a function of experimentally induced minority
and majority competence},
Journal = {Psychonomic Science},
Volume = {10},
Number = {10},
Pages = {329-330},
Publisher = {Springer Nature},
Year = {1968},
Month = {January},
Abstract = {Two levels of minority competence and four levels of
majority competence were induced by means of bogus feedback
on 10 nonpressure perceptual trials. On the ensuing 15
conformity pressure trials it was found that high competent
minority Ss conformed less than low competent Ss, and there
was a direct relationship between the conformity behavior of
the minority Ss and the number of purportedly high competent
subjects in the majority. © 1968, Psychonomic Journals. All
rights reserved.},
Doi = {10.3758/BF03331545},
Key = {fds322496}
}
%% Books
@book{fds171463,
Author = {Strauman T. ;Costanzo P. and Garber J.},
Title = {Depression in Adolescent Girls: Science and
Prevention},
Publisher = {Guilford Press},
Address = {New York},
Editor = {Strauman, T.J. and Costanzo, P.R. and Garber,
J.},
Year = {2011},
Key = {fds171463}
}
@book{fds171469,
Author = {Darity S. and Bonilla-Silva, E. and Costanzo, P. and McClain, P.E. and Mason, P. and Singleton, M. and Scott, W.},
Title = {The Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences},
Publisher = {MacMillan},
Address = {New York},
Year = {2007},
Key = {fds171469}
}
%% Chapters in Books
@misc{fds335643,
Author = {Hussong, AM and Langley, HA and Coffman, JL and Halberstadt, AG and Costanzo, PR},
Title = {Parent socialization of children’s gratitude},
Pages = {199-219},
Booktitle = {Developing Gratitude in Children and Adolescents},
Publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
Year = {2017},
Month = {January},
ISBN = {9781107182721},
Abstract = {Parent Socialization of Children’s Gratitude Thank-You
Note I wanted small pierced earrings (gold), You gave me
slippers (gray). My mother said that she would scold Unless
I wrote to say How much I like them. Not much. -Judith
Viorst The desire to cultivate gratitude in ourselves and
others dates back centuries, as is evident in the early
writings of Aristotle on virtues (Thomson, 1955), although
our understanding of what gratitude means continues to
evolve through ongoing scholarly debate and societal
discourse (Kapp, 2013; Reiser, 2014). One of the voices in
this debate comes from social psychologists affiliated with
the Positive Psychology movement who spearheaded research
that has shaped our understanding of gratitude in adults.
These researchers differentially adopt the view of gratitude
as a life orientation (Wood, Froh, & Geraghty, 2010); a
character, virtue, or personality trait (Froh, Sefick, &
Emmons, 2008); and a mood or emotional state (McCullough,
Emmons, & Tsang, 2002). Research based on this view shows
that adults and adolescents who more strongly endorse
gratitude traits also report greater life satisfaction,
better health outcomes, and more successful relationships
(see Algoe, Haidt, & Gable, 2008; Bausert et al., Chapter 7,
this volume; Emmons & McCullough, 2003; Froh, Kashdan,
Ozimkowski, & Miller, 2009; Wood et al., 2010). Similar
research with children has lagged behind that with adults,
although this volume is one of a handful of recent works
demonstrating growing interest in this topic. As with other
areas of research, the psychological study of gratitude has
largely followed a downward extension model with the goal of
uncovering how early in childhood scientists can replicate
findings from adult samples. This approach to understanding
gratitude in children aligns with that from the classic
descriptive focus of developmental psychology that seeks to
identify at what ages a given competency emerges. More
recent approaches to understanding development, such as the
developmental science framework (Cairns & Elder, 2001),
eschew age difference findings as an end goal in favor of
understanding how a given competency emerges over ontogeny
and what form it takes within the system of influences from
which that competency might arise. To meet this aim, a
developmental science approach must squarely tackle the
issues of what gratitude is at its core, how it changes with
ontogeny, and how we best capture its elements as they
emerge first in a nascent and then in a mature
form.},
Doi = {10.1017/9781316863121.010},
Key = {fds335643}
}
@misc{fds251598,
Author = {Costanzo, PR and Hoyle, RH and Leary, MR},
Title = {Personality, Social Psychology, and Psychopathology:
Reflections on a Lewinian Vision},
Booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Personality and Social
Psychology},
Publisher = {Oxford University Press},
Year = {2012},
Month = {September},
ISBN = {9780195398991},
Abstract = {In this chapter, we first consider the historical and
conceptual roots of the tripartite, but at times rocky,
marriage of the fields of personality, social, and abnormal
psychology. After briefly describing the hopes of early
20th-century scholars to array the study of normal and
abnormal behavior, thought, and feeling on the same
conceptual continua, we call for the rekindling of these
conjunctive hopes. Indeed, we argue that with the advent of
current cross-cutting developments in cognitive,
socioemotional, and biological perspectives in the broader
domain of the behavioral sciences, that the time is ripe for
rearranging the marriage among these fields. In order to
provide a conceptual frame for such a conjunctive effort, we
return to Lewinian field theory and its definition of forces
of locomotion in the life space as a particularly notable
way to put the examination of normal and abnormal psychology
in the same theoretical space. By addressing some critical
ideational themes in the domains of personality and social
psychology, we attempt to illustrate the overlap of these
themes with the ideas and questions of scholars of abnormal
behavior. Of course, in deploying a Lewinian model our
analyses turn to the dynamics of person x environment
interactions in the regions of the life space. In doing so
we define the phenomena of meaning-making and the multiple
"worldview" existential models in social and personality
psychology as the forces constituting the primary dynamics
defining the permeability of adaptive regions of the "life
space" or phenomenal field. We illustrate these dynamics by
detailed consideration of human adaptation in two critical
regions or domains of life experience in the behavioral
field: the domain of regulatory transactions and the domain
of acceptance, social affection, and relationships. While
these domains certainly do not exhaust all regions of the
life space, we argue that they are particularly pertinent
for parsing continua of normal-to-abnormal adaptation and
conjoining the nature of psychopathology with the everyday
struggles of personal and social significance to all humans.
We conclude our analysis by rather unabashed advocacy, not
specifically for the model we explore, but for scholarship
that is aimed at developing models that link the normal to
what we refer to as the abnormal or psychopathological. As
humans, the cloths of our selves and our environments are
made from common as well as individually unique fibers. We
conclude that to disambiguate how such fibers are woven
together to frame the forces driving our travels from
blissful adaptation to painful maladjustment should be a
primary agenda for our interconnected sciences of human
behavior.},
Doi = {10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195398991.013.0023},
Key = {fds251598}
}
@misc{fds171464,
Author = {Costanzo, P.R. and Hoyle, R.},
Title = {The role of research in personality and social psychology
for illuminating psychopathology and its
contexts},
Booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Personality and Social
Psychology},
Publisher = {Oxford Press},
Address = {New York},
Editor = {K. Deaux, and M. Snyder},
Year = {2010},
Key = {fds171464}
}
@misc{fds171465,
Author = {Costanzo, P.R.},
Title = {The nature and nurture of morality and goodness},
Booktitle = {In Search of Goodness},
Publisher = {University of Chicago Press},
Address = {Chicago},
Editor = {Ruth Grant},
Year = {2010},
Key = {fds171465}
}
@misc{fds171467,
Author = {Strauman, T. and Costanzo, P. and Merril, K. and Jones, N.},
Title = {The Applications of Social Psychology to Clinical
Psychology},
Booktitle = {Social Psychology: A Handbook of Basic Principles},
Publisher = {Guilford Press},
Address = {New York},
Editor = {E.T. Higgins and A.W. Kruglanski},
Year = {2010},
Key = {fds171467}
}
%% Articles Submitted
@article{fds6859,
Author = {P.R. Costanzo and Putallaz, M. and Costanzo, P. R. and Klein, T.P. and Efron,
L.A.},
Title = {Intergenerational and temporal continuities in peer
relationships},
Journal = {Child Development},
Year = {1995},
Key = {fds6859}
}
%% Book Reviews
@article{fds206447,
Author = {P.R. Costanzo},
Title = {A View from the Bridge: Connecting Social and Clinical
Psychology (A review of J. Maddux and J. Tangney (Eds): The
Social Psychological Foundations of Clinical
Psychology)},
Journal = {PsycCritiques},
Volume = {56},
Number = {4},
Year = {2011},
Key = {fds206447}
}