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We examined the effect of negative peer experiences (NPEs; peer victimization and exclusion) on mood (depressed, angry, positive). Seventy‐seven (43 female) fifth graders from elementary schools located in a small town in the Midwest completed a friendship quality measure, in addition to daily reports (seven school days) of mood and peer experiences. Multilevel modeling showed that children who had NPEs in which no one intervened had more negative and less positive mood. For negative mood, this result was attenuated if the child had a friend who was generally helpful. The results demonstrate the positive role of bystanders during NPEs and highlight the protective role of high‐quality friendships. 相似文献
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Aguirre Angelica A. LeBlanc Linda A. Reavis Andrea Shillingsburg Alice M. Delfs Caitlin H. Miltenberger Catherine A. Symer Kaneen B. 《The Analysis of verbal behavior》2019,35(1):21-38
The Analysis of Verbal Behavior - Children with autism are often taught auditory conditional discriminations in the form of personal information questions that might prove useful in conversation... 相似文献
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Reconsidering the Rural–Urban Continuum in Rural Health Research: A Test of Stable Relationships Using Mortality as a Health Measure 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Ronald E. Cossman Jeralynn S. Cossman Arthur G. Cosby Rebel M. Reavis 《Population research and policy review》2008,27(4):459-476
Health researchers commonly use existing rural–urban continua based on population size and adjacency to metro areas to categorize
counties. When these continua are collapsed into simple rural-versus-urban aggregations, significant differences within the
categories are masked. We show that when the entire range of the 10-category Rural–Urban Continuum Codes (RUCC) is used, the
direction of the coefficients may differ and the fit of the model varies substantially across contiguous categories. However,
collapsing contiguous categories masks variations within the continuum. To the extent that health policy decisions are made
based on such aggregations, inappropriate policy choices may result (e.g., low payments to counties with relatively high needs).
Given Congressional calls to address rural health, and the new Office of Management and Budget (OMB) statistical area classification
system, debate over appropriate categorizations schemes is timely. We regress age-adjusted all-causes of death on various
socioeconomic factors to assess the appropriate use of variants of the rural–urban continuum for health research. Our findings
support two main conclusions. First, researchers collapsing urban–rural categorization schemes may be masking important categorical
differences, inadvertently influencing policymaking predicated on their work. Second, finer classification of settlements
yields uneven results. That is, coefficients shift signs across the continuum, indicating that collapsed models may be inappropriate.
Results derived using collapsed variants of the RUCC may be too unstable to use as health research and funding categorization schemes. We suggest that a health status or outcomes categorization scheme is likely to be a more appropriate
metric for rural health research.
Reavis was at the SSRC, MSU while drafting this article. 相似文献
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