Sociometric Techniques
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Subject Areas on Research
- A Latent Variable Approach to Measuring Social Dynamics in Adolescence.
- A comparison of aggressive-rejected and nonaggressive-rejected children's interpretations of self-directed and other-directed rejection.
- Early adolescents' social standing in peer groups: behavioral correlates of stability and change.
- Effect of children’s perceived rejection on physical aggression
- Effectiveness of a social relations intervention program for aggressive and nonaggressive, rejected children.
- Family adversity, positive peer relationships, and children's externalizing behavior: a longitudinal perspective on risk and resilience.
- Friendships with peers who are low or high in aggression as moderators of the link between peer victimization and declines in academic functioning.
- Group social context and children's aggressive behavior.
- Hypercortisolism associated with social subordinance or social isolation among wild baboons.
- Impression formation: the role of expressive behavior.
- Mining the network: peers and adolescent health.
- Modifications in children's goals when encountering obstacles to conflict resolution
- Peer status and aggression in boys' groups: developmental and contextual analyses.
- Response decision processes and externalizing behavior problems in adolescents.
- Social information-processing mechanisms in reactive and proactive aggression.
- Socialization mediators of the relation between socioeconomic status and child conduct problems.
- Subtypes of social withdrawal in early childhood: sociometric status and social-cognitive differences across four years.
- The feasibility of measuring social networks among older adults in assisted living and dementia special care units.
- The interactive influences of friend deviance and reward dominance on the development of externalizing behavior during middle adolescence.
- The neural sociometer: brain mechanisms underlying state self-esteem.
- The structure of urban mortality. A methodological study of Hannover, Germany. Part I.
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Keywords of People
- Asher, Steven R., Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience, Psychology & Neuroscience
- Dodge, Kenneth A., William McDougall Distinguished Professor of Public Policy Studies, Duke Science & Society