Title: The Limits of Resilience: A Unified Model of Development
1The Limits of ResilienceA Unified Model of
Development
- Oslo-RBUPJune, 2009
- Arnold Sameroffsameroff_at_umich.edu
2 How do we understand how some children
succeed? How can we improve the lives of the
other children?
3?
Y
X
AdultMental Health
Babies
4Agendas for Intervention Professionals
- Academic
- 2. Social
- 3. Political
- How do we understand children?
- How do we improve children?
- Who is responsible for children?
5Agendas for Intervention Professionals
- Academic Agenda
- How do we understand children?
6Unified Theory of Child Development
- Personal Change Model
- Contextual Model
- Regulation Model
- Representational Model
71. Personal Change Model
Trait
DEVELOPMENT
TIME
8- Newborn Biological Condition
- Normal
- High Risk
- Impaired
- ChildhoodBehavioral Outcomes
- Normal
- Delayed
- Disabled
9- Newborn Biological Condition
- Normal
- High Risk
- Impaired
- ChildhoodBehavioral Outcomes
- Normal
- Delayed
- Disabled
DivergentDevelopment(Multifinality)
ConvergentDevelopment(Equifinality)
101. Personal Change Model
111. Personal Change Model
ADULTHOOD
ADOLESCENCE
DEVELOPMENT
PRESCHOOL
INFANCY
TIME
12Continuity and Discontinuity
- What stays the same over time?
- What changes over time?
- Temperament/Personality
- Intelligence/Executive Functions
- Relationships/Attachment
13Relation of Socioeconomic Statusto IQ Scores
14Requirements for aUnified Theory of Development
- Personal Change Model
- Contextual Model
- Regulation Model
- Representational Model
15Social Ecological Model
16Rochester Longitudinal Study
- Adolescence
- Alfred Baldwin
- Clare Baldwin
- Tim Kasser
- Adulthood
- Katherine Rosenblum
- Lisa Slominski
- Infancy
- Arnold Sameroff
- Melvin Zax
- Early Childhood
- Ronald Seifer
- Ralph Barocas
1730-Year Rochester Longitudinal Study
- N250 Families
- Data Waves
- Infancy (Birth-1 yr.)
- Preschool (2-1/2 4 yrs.)
- Adolescence (13 - 18 yrs.)
- Adulthood (30 yrs.)
18Social EcologyMultiple Risk Scale
- Child-Parent Interaction
- Developmental Knowledge
- Parent Psychiatric History
- Parent Anxiety
- HH Education
- HH Occupation
- Family Size
- Single Parent
- Stressful Life Events
- Minority Status
- Child - Parent
-
- Parent
- Family
- Social
194-yr. Behavioral Outcomes
- Intellectual Competence
- WPPSI IQ
- Mental Health
- Rochester Adaptive Behavior Inventory
20Effect of Risk Score on 4-year IQ
21Effect of Risk Score on 4-year Mental Health
ILL
SYMPTOMATIC
HEALTHY
22National Head Start/Public School Early
Childhood Transition Demonstration Study(Steve
Peck, Craig Ramey, Sharon Ramey)
- N7,515 Children
- 31 Programs in 30 States
- Longitudinal Study from KG-to 3rd Grade
- 14 Risk Factors
23Head Start Transition Study
Academic Competence X KG Risk Groups
100
90
Acad Comp - KG
Acad Comp - 1ST
Acad Comp - 2ND
80
Acad Comp - 3RD
3.00
2.00
1.00
.00
Kindergarten Risk Group
24(No Transcript)
25Requirements for aUnified Theory of Development
- Personal Change Model
- Contextual Model
- Regulation Model
- Representational Model
263. Regulation Model
Other-Regulation
Self-Regulation
Development
27Developmental Regulation
- Physiological
- Emotional
- Behavioral
- Attentional
- Parenting
- Schooling
- Legal System
- Therapies
28Operationalizing RegulationTransactional Model
29Temperament Model of Antisocial Behavior
Child
DisobedientTemperament
Antisocial Behavior
time
30Patterson Coercion Model of Antisocial Behavior
Parent
IneptDiscipline
Coercive Behaviors
Coercive Behaviors
Antisocial Behaviors
Child
Disobedience
time
313a. Transactional Regulatory Model
Other-Regulation
Self-Regulation
32(No Transcript)
33Early Childhood Longitudinal Study (ECLS-K)
- Physical Punishment and Child Externalizing
Behavior
Collaborators Elizabeth Gershoff Jenifer
Lansford Holly Sexton Pamela Davis-Kean
34(No Transcript)
35Laird et. al. 2003
36Requirements for aUnified Theory of Development
- Personal Change Model
- Contextual Model
- Regulation Model
- Representational Model
374. Representational Model
REALITY
38Representation are Not Reality But the
Interpretation of Reality
- Cognitive Representations
- Putting external world inside
- Social Representations
- Working Models
- Cultural Representations
- Ethnicity
- Social Class
- Developmental Theories
39Infant Temperament ProjectRonald Seifer, Lisa
Barrett, Elizabeth Krafchuk
- 120 mothers
- Videotape 10 Minute Interaction
- Mother Own Infant
- 6 Unfamiliar Mothers Infants
- Scoring using Same Temperament Scale
- Mother rates Own Infant
- Mother rates 6 Unfamiliar Infants
- Trained Observer Rates all Infants
40Triadic Adjective Temperament Scale
- Mood Scale
- Intensity Scale
- Activity Scale
- Approach Scale
41 Mother-Observer Correlations Own Infants
Seifer, Sameroff, Barrett, L.C., Krafchuk, E.
(1994)
42Mother-Observer Correlations Unfamiliar Infants
Seifer, Sameroff, Barrett, L.C., Krafchuk, E.
(1994)
43Mother-Observer Combined Correlations
44Michigan Family StudySusan McDonough, Michael
MacKenzie, Kate Rosenblum.Mother Perceptions
and Infant Crying
- 200 Mothers and Infants
- 7 months
- Assess Amount of Infant Crying
- Assess Mothers Judgment of Problem
- 15 months
- Assess Amount of Infant Crying
- 33 months
- Assess Infant Mental Health (CBCL)
457-month Mothers Rating of Crying Problems and
7-month Infant Daily Crying Time
F(3, 196) 8.46, plt.001
7-Month Rating
7-Months
15-Months
467-month Mothers Rating of Crying Problems and
7 and 15-month Infant Daily Crying Time
F(3, 196) 8.46, plt.001
7-Month Rating
7-Months
15-Months
477-month Mothers Rating of Crying Problemsand
33-month Child Behavior Check List Score
F(3, 174)5.22, plt.01
7-Month Rating
48Putting the Pieces TogetherUnifying a Model of
Development
- Personal Model
- Contextual Model
- Regulation Model
- Representational Model
49Start with Structural ModelWhat are all the
pieces?
PERSON/Phenotype
50Psychological System
CHILD
CHILD
Mental Health Social Competence Communication Co
gnition
PSYCHOLOGY
51Biopsychological System
CHILD
CHILD
PSYCHOLOGY Mental Health Social
Competence Communication Cognition
BIOLOGY EpigenomicsProteomics
Neurophysiology Health Status Gender
52BiopsychoSocial Ecological System
GEOPOLITICAL
COMMUNITY
FAMILY
PARENT
PEERS
SCHOOL
BIOLOGY EpigenomicsProteomics Neurophysiology
Health Gender
PSYCHOLOGY
53Adding Personal Change Model Continuity
Discontinuity
TIME
TIME
54Biopsychosocial Continuity Model
OTHER
INFANCY CHILDHOOD ADOLESCENCE ADULTHOOD
55Longitudinal Correlations forIQ and Mental
Health (MH)
56Longitudinal Correlations forIQ and Contextual
Risk
.72
.72
4-Year
IQ
18-Year
13-Year
-.59
-.61
-.47
4-Year
RISK
18-Year
13-Year
.80
.77
57Reframing Continuity-Discontinuity Model
OTHER
SELF
FAMILY ELEMENTARY SECONDARY
WORK
SCHOOL SCHOOL NEW
FAMILY
INFANCY CHILDHOOD ADOLESCENCE
ADULTHOOD
58Adolescent-Junior High School Transition
OTHER
SELF
FAMILY ELEMENTARY SECONDARY
WORK
SCHOOL SCHOOL NEW
FAMILY
59Junior High Age-Stage Mismatch. Eccles
Midgley Stage-Environment Fit Approach
- Increased School Size
- Increased Impersonal Bureaucracy
- Increased Teacher Control
- Decreased Teacher Trust
- Disruptions in Peer Network
- Decreased Opportunity for Close
Student-Teacher Ties - ANTI-DEVELOPMENTAL
- Opportunities to Matter
- Opportunities for Autonomy
- Feelings of Respect
- Peer Group Affiliation
- Sexual Intimacy
- Close Ties to Mentors
60Opportunities for Prevention or Intervention
OTHER
SELF
INFANCY CHILDHOOD ADOLESCENCE ADULTHOOD