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Dive into the research topics where Amanda Cumberland is active.

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Featured researches published by Amanda Cumberland.


Developmental Psychology | 2009

Longitudinal Relations of Children's Effortful Control, Impulsivity, and Negative Emotionality to Their Externalizing, Internalizing, and Co-Occurring Behavior Problems

Nancy Eisenberg; Carlos Valiente; Tracy L. Spinrad; Amanda Cumberland; Jeffrey Liew; Mark Reiser; Qing Zhou; Sandra H. Losoya

The purpose of the study was to examine the relations of effortful control (EC), impulsivity, and negative emotionality to at least borderline clinical levels of symptoms and change in maladjustment over four years. Childrens (N = 214; 77% European American; M age = 73 months) externalizing and internalizing symptoms were rated by parents and teachers at 3 times, 2 years apart (T1, T2, and T3) and were related to childrens adult-rated EC, impulsivity, and emotion. In addition, the authors found patterns of change in maladjustment were related to these variables at T3 while controlling for the T1 predictor. Externalizing problems (pure or co-occurring with internalizing problems) were associated with low EC, high impulsivity, and negative emotionality, especially anger, and patterns of change also related to these variables. Internalizing problems were associated with low impulsivity and sadness and somewhat with high anger. Low attentional EC was related to internalizing problems only in regard to change in maladjustment. Change in impulsivity was associated with change in internalizing primarily when controlling for change in externalizing problems.


Developmental Psychology | 2005

The Relations of Problem Behavior Status to Children's Negative Emotionality, Effortful Control, and Impulsivity: Concurrent Relations and Prediction of Change

Nancy Eisenberg; Adrienne Sadovsky; Tracy L. Spinrad; Richard A. Fabes; Sandra H. Losoya; Carlos Valiente; Mark Reiser; Amanda Cumberland; Stephanie A. Shepard

The relations of childrens internalizing and externalizing problem behaviors to their concurrent regulation, impulsivity (reactive undercontrol), anger, sadness, and fearfulness and these aspects of functioning 2 years prior were examined. Parents and teachers completed measures of childrens (N = 185; ages 6 through 9 years) adjustment, negative emotionality, regulation, and behavior control; behavioral measures of regulation also were obtained. In general, both internalizing and externalizing problems were associated with negative emotionality. Externalizers were low in effortful regulation and high in impulsivity, whereas internalizers, compared with nondisordered children, were low in impulsivity but not effortful control. Moreover, indices of negative emotionality, regulation, and impulsivity with the level of the same variables 2 years before controlled predicted stability versus change in problem behavior status.


Child Development | 1999

Consistency and Development of Prosocial Dispositions: A Longitudinal Study

Nancy Eisenberg; Ivanna K. Guthrie; Bridget C. Murphy; Stephanie A. Shepard; Amanda Cumberland; Gustavo Carlo

The issue of whether there is consistency in prosocial dispositions was examined with a longitudinal data set extending from ages 4 to 5 years into early adulthood (N = 32). Spontaneous prosocial behaviors observed in the preschool classroom predicted actual prosocial behavior, other- and self-reported prosocial behavior, self-reported sympathy, and perspective taking in childhood to early adulthood. Prosocial behaviors that were not expected to reflect an other-orientation (i.e., low cost helping and compliant prosocial behavior) generally did not predict later prosocial behavior or sympathy. Sympathy appeared to partially mediate the relation of early spontaneous sharing to later prosocial dispositions. The results support the view that there are stable individual differences in prosocial responding that have their origins in early childhood.


Emotion | 2006

Relation of emotion-related regulation to children's social competence: a longitudinal study.

Tracy L. Spinrad; Nancy Eisenberg; Amanda Cumberland; Richard A. Fabes; Carlos Valiente; Stephanie A. Shepard; Mark Reiser; Sandra H. Losoya; Ivanna K. Guthrie

The differential relations of childrens emotion-related regulation (i.e., effortful control and impulsivity) to their personality resiliency, adult-rated popularity, and social competence were examined in children who were 4.5-7.9 years old and who were remeasured 2 years later. Parents and teachers reported on all constructs, and childrens attentional persistence was observed. Structural equation modeling was used to test the mediating role of resiliency on the relations between regulation/control and popularity using two-wave longitudinal data. The results provide some evidence of the mediating role of resiliency in the relations between effortful control and popularity, provide some evidence of bidirectional effects, and also buttress the view that emotional regulation should be differentiated into effortful and reactive forms of control.


Developmental Psychology | 2003

The Relations of Effortful Control and Ego Control to Children's Resiliency and Social Functioning.

Nancy Eisenberg; Carlos Valiente; Richard A. Fabes; Cynthia L. Smith; Mark Reiser; Stephanie A. Shepard; Sandra H. Losoya; Ivanna K. Guthrie; Bridget C. Murphy; Amanda Cumberland

The relations of effortful control and ego control to childrens (mean age = 137 months) resiliency, social status, and social competence were examined concurrently (Time 3) and over time. Adults reported on the constructs, and a behavioral measure of persistence was obtained. At Time 3, resiliency mediated the unique relations of both effortful and reactive control to social status, and effortful control directly predicted socially appropriate behavior. Negative emotionality moderated the relations of ego and effortful control to socially appropriate behavior. When levels of the variables 2 years prior were accounted for, all relations held at Time 3 except that effortful control did not predict resiliency (even though it was the stronger predictor at Time 3) and ego control directly predicted socially appropriate behavior.


Sex Roles | 2002

The influences of sex and gender-role identity on moral cognition and prosocial personality traits

Eva E. Skoe; Amanda Cumberland; Nancy Eisenberg; Kristine L. Hansen; Judi Perry

The relations of sex and gender-role identity to moral thought and prosocial personality traits were examined. Two hundred and nine men and women rated the importance of real-life, care-related, justice-related, and mixed (both care- and justice-related) moral dilemmas. Responses on the real-life and mixed dilemmas also were scored for care and justice orientations. Women and feminine persons viewed moral conflicts as more important than did men and masculine people. On the mixed dilemmas, women scored higher than men on care reasoning, whereas men scored higher than women on justice reasoning. Regardless of sex or gender role, relational real-life dilemmas evoked higher importance and care reasoning scores than did nonrelational ones. Women and persons high in femininity showed more empathic concern for other people. Masculine persons scored lower on personal distress, whereas androgynous persons reported more helpful behaviors than did all others.


Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin | 2002

The Role of Reported Emotion in Real-Life and Hypothetical Moral Dilemmas

Eva E. Skoe; Nancy Eisenberg; Amanda Cumberland

To form a more complete picture of the complexity that underlies human morality, the connection between emotion and moral thought in 209 men and women was examined. Participants rated the importance of one real-life and three hypothetical moral dilemmas and their feelings while making decisions about the dilemmas. The responses on these dilemmas also were scored for their care and justice orientations. Results showed that feeling upset and sympathy were uniquely positively related to dilemma importance. In the real-life situations, sympathy and anger uniquely predicted both care (positively) and justice (negatively) orientations. Relational real-life dilemmas evoked more emotions than did nonrelational ones. In general, women scored higher than men on emotions when considering moral dilemmas.


Psychological Inquiry | 1998

Parental Socialization of Emotion.

Nancy Eisenberg; Amanda Cumberland; Tracy L. Spinrad


Child Development | 2001

The relations of regulation and emotionality to children's externalizing and internalizing problem behavior.

Nancy Eisenberg; Amanda Cumberland; Tracy L. Spinrad; Richard A. Fabes; Stephanie A. Shepard; Mark Reiser; Bridget C. Murphy; Sandra H. Losoya; Ivanna K. Guthrie


Child Development | 2004

The Relations of Effortful Control and Impulsivity to Children's Resiliency and Adjustment

Nancy Eisenberg; Tracy L. Spinrad; Richard A. Fabes; Mark Reiser; Amanda Cumberland; Stephanie A. Shepard; Carlos Valiente; Sandra H. Losoya; Ivanna K. Guthrie; Marilyn S. Thompson

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Qing Zhou

University of California

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Mark Reiser

Arizona State University

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