Literature DB >> 14984137

Temperament and coping: advantages of an individual differences perspective.

Douglas Derryberry1, Marjorie A Reed, Carolyn Pilkenton-Taylor.   

Abstract

This paper examines the advantages that arise from an individual differences approach to children's coping and vulnerabilities. It suggests that the basic motivational and attentional systems involved in temperament constitute relatively primitive coping mechanisms. With development, these primitive coping skills are aided by representational and other cortical functions, allowing the coping process to begin before a stressful event and thereby increasing the child's capacity to plan an effective coping option and to enhance self-control. Such an emphasis on motivational and attentional differences allows us to take advantage of children's diverse personalities as "experiments of nature" and to better understand the temperamental patterns that contribute to adaptive and maladaptive outcomes.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14984137

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Psychopathol        ISSN: 0954-5794


  18 in total

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7.  Relations of parenting and temperament to Chinese children's experience of negative life events, coping efficacy, and externalizing problems.

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Review 9.  Multifinality in the development of personality disorders: a Biology x Sex x Environment interaction model of antisocial and borderline traits.

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Journal:  Dev Psychopathol       Date:  2009

10.  Temperament and personality: the German version of the Adult Temperament Questionnaire (ATQ).

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