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Dive into the research topics where Amy Weitlauf is active.

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Featured researches published by Amy Weitlauf.


Autism | 2014

Relationship Satisfaction, Parenting Stress, and Depression in Mothers of Children with Autism.

Amy Weitlauf; Alison Vehorn; Julie Lounds Taylor; Zachary Warren

Mothers of children with autism report higher levels of depression than mothers of children with other developmental disabilities. We explored the relations between child characteristics of diagnostic severity and problem behaviors, parenting stress, relationship quality, and depressive symptoms in 70 mothers of young children with autism. We hypothesized that relationship quality and parenting stress would relate to maternal depression beyond contributions of child characteristics. Multiple regression analysis revealed a main effect of parenting stress above and beyond child problem behaviors and autism severity. A significant interaction emerged, with relationship quality buffering the effect of parenting stress on depression. Results suggest that the relation between child problem behaviors and maternal depression should be considered in conjunction with other measures of marriage and family stress. Relationship quality and parenting stress may also represent important factors to be explicitly considered within intervention paradigms for young children with autism spectrum disorders.


Journal of Abnormal Psychology | 2013

Does supportive parenting mitigate the longitudinal effects of peer victimization on depressive thoughts and symptoms in children

Sarah A. Bilsky; David A. Cole; Tammy L. Dukewich; Nina C. Martin; Keneisha R. Sinclair; Cong V. Tran; Kathryn Roeder; Julia W. Felton; Carlos Tilghman-Osborne; Amy Weitlauf; Melissa A. Maxwell

Cohen and Wills (Cohen, S., & Wills, T. A., 1985, Stress, social support, and the buffering hypothesis. Psychological Bulletin, 98, 310-357) described two broad models whereby social support could mitigate the deleterious effects of stress on health: a main effect model and stress-buffering model. A specific application of these models was tested in a three-wave, multimethod study of 1888 children to assess ways parental support (social support) mitigates the effects of peer victimization (stress) on childrens depressive symptoms and depression-related cognitions (health-related outcomes). Results revealed that (a) both supportive parenting and peer victimization had main effects on depressive symptoms and cognitions; (b) supportive parenting and peer victimization did not interact in the prediction of depressive thoughts and symptoms; (c) these results generalized across age and gender; and (d) increases in depressive symptoms were related to later reduction of supportive parenting and later increase in peer victimization. Although supportive parenting did not moderate the adverse outcomes associated with peer victimization, results show that its main effect can counterbalance or offset these effects to some degree. Implications for practice and future research are discussed.


Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology | 2012

Impact of Physical and Relational Peer Victimization on Depressive Cognitions in Children and Adolescents

Keneisha R. Sinclair; David A. Cole; Tammy L. Dukewich; Julia W. Felton; Amy Weitlauf; Melissa A. Maxwell; Carlos Tilghman-Osborne; Amy Jacky

The purpose of this study is to find longitudinal evidence of the effect of targeted peer victimization (TPV) on depressive cognitions as a function of victimization type and gender. Prospective relations of physical and relational peer victimization to positive and negative self-cognitions were examined in a 1-year, 2-wave longitudinal study. Self-reports of cognitions and both peer nomination and self-report measures of peer victimization experiences were obtained from 478 predominantly Caucasian children and young adolescents (Grades 3–6 at the beginning of the study) evenly split between genders. As a result, (a) peer victimization predicted increases in negative cognitions and decreases in positive cognitions over time; (b) relational victimization was more consistently related to changes in depressive cognitions than was physical victimization; (c) the prospective relation between victimization and depressive cognitions was stronger for boys than for girls; and (d) when the overlap between relational and physical TPV was statistically controlled, girls experienced more relational TPV than did boys, and boys experienced more physical TPV than did girls. Peer victimization, particularly relational TPV, has a significant impact on childrens depressive cognitions. This relation seems particularly true for boys. Implications for future research, clinical work with victimized youth at risk for depression, and school policy to help both victims and bullies are discussed.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2014

Assessing the utility of a virtual environment for enhancing facial affect recognition in adolescents with autism.

Esubalew Bekele; Julie Crittendon; Zhi Zheng; Amy Swanson; Amy Weitlauf; Zachary Warren; Nilanjan Sarkar

Teenagers with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and age-matched controls participated in a dynamic facial affect recognition task within a virtual reality (VR) environment. Participants identified the emotion of a facial expression displayed at varied levels of intensity by a computer generated avatar. The system assessed performance (i.e., accuracy, confidence ratings, response latency, and stimulus discrimination) as well as how participants used their gaze to process facial information using an eye tracker. Participants in both groups were similarly accurate at basic facial affect recognition at varied levels of intensity. Despite similar performance characteristics, ASD participants endorsed lower confidence in their responses and substantial variation in gaze patterns in absence of perceptual discrimination deficits. These results add support to the hypothesis that deficits in emotion and face recognition for individuals with ASD are related to fundamental differences in information processing. We discuss implications of this finding in a VR environment with regards to potential future applications and paradigms targeting not just enhanced performance, but enhanced social information processing within intelligent systems capable of adaptation to individual processing differences.


Journal of Clinical Psychology | 2009

Gender differences in the longitudinal structure of cognitive diatheses for depression in children and adolescents.

David A. Cole; Farrah Jacquez; Alanna E. Truss; Ashley Q. Pineda; Amy Weitlauf; Carlos Tilghman-Osborne; Julia W. Felton; Melissa A. Maxwell

In a school-based, four-wave, longitudinal study, children (grades 4-7) and young adolescents (grades 6-9) completed questionnaires measuring depressive symptoms and depressive cognitions, including positive and negative cognitions on the Cognitive Triad Inventory for Children (CTI-C; Kaslow, Stark, Printz, Livingston, & Tsai, 1992) and self-perceived competence on the Self-Perception Profile for Children (SPPC; Harter, 1985). Application of the Trait-State-Occasion model (Cole, Martin, & Steiger, 2005) revealed the existence of a time-invariant trait factor and a set of time-varying occasion factors. Gender differences emerged, indicating that some cognitive diatheses were more trait-like for girls than for boys (i.e., positive and negative cognitions on the CTI-C; self-perceived physical appearance and global self-worth on the SPPC). Implications focus on the emergent gender difference in depression, the design of longitudinal studies, and clinical decisions about the implementation of prevention versus intervention programs.


Journal of Abnormal Psychology | 2011

Disentangling the prospective relations between maladaptive cognitions and depressive symptoms

Beth LaGrange; David A. Cole; Farrah Jacquez; Jeff A. Ciesla; Danielle H. Dallaire; Ashley Q. Pineda; Alanna E. Truss; Amy Weitlauf; Carlos Tilghman-Osborne; Julia W. Felton

In a four-wave, cohort-longitudinal design with a community sample of 515 children and adolescents (grades 2 through 9), this study examined the longitudinal structure of and prospective interrelations between maladaptive cognitions and depressive symptoms. Multigroup structural equation modeling generated four major findings. First, the longitudinal structures of maladaptive cognitions and depressive symptoms consist of a single time-invariant factor and a series of time-varying factors. Second, evidence supported a model in which depressive symptoms predicted negative cognitions but not the reverse. Third, the time-invariant components of cognition and depression were highly correlated. Fourth, the strength of the depression-to-cognition relation increased with age. Implications regarding the mechanisms underlying clinical interventions with depressed children are discussed.


Ksii Transactions on Internet and Information Systems | 2016

A Gaze-Contingent Adaptive Virtual Reality Driving Environment for Intervention in Individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorders

Joshua W. Wade; Lian Zhang; Dayi Bian; Jing Fan; Amy Swanson; Amy Weitlauf; Medha Shukla Sarkar; Zachary Warren; Nilanjan Sarkar

In addition to social and behavioral deficits, individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) often struggle to develop the adaptive skills necessary to achieve independence. Driving intervention in individuals with ASD is a growing area of study, but it is still widely under-researched. We present the development and preliminary assessment of a gaze-contingent adaptive virtual reality driving simulator that uses real-time gaze information to adapt the driving environment with the aim of providing a more individualized method of driving intervention. We conducted a small pilot study of 20 adolescents with ASD using our system: 10 with the adaptive gaze-contingent version of the system and 10 in a purely performance-based version. Preliminary results suggest that the novel intervention system may be beneficial in teaching driving skills to individuals with ASD.


Journal of Early Adolescence | 2011

A Longitudinal Study of Cognitive Risks for Depressive Symptoms in Children and Young Adolescents.

David A. Cole; Farrah Jacquez; Beth LaGrange; Ashley Q. Pineda; Alanna E. Truss; Amy Weitlauf; Carlos Tilghman-Osborne; Julia W. Felton; Judy Garber; Danielle H. Dallaire; Jeff A. Ciesla; Melissa A. Maxwell; Lynette M. Dufton

Youths with high (N = 52) or low cognitive vulnerability (N = 48) for depression were selected from a larger sample (N = 515) of students (7-10 years old), based on their attributional style (AS), negative cognitions (NC), and/or self-competence (SC). Long-term effects of cognitive vulnerabilities on depressive symptoms were examined in a 3-year, three-wave, multi-informant, longitudinal design. Three findings emerged. First, some empirical overlap exists among these three types of cognitive diatheses, especially between NC and SC. Second, the combination of AS, NC, and SC had a significant (but diminishing) relationship to depressive symptoms at 6, 18, and 30 months, primarily due to NC and SC, not AS. Third, interactions between cognitive risk and life events were not significant, suggesting an additive type of diathesis-stress model for depression in young adolescents.


IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering | 2016

Robot-Mediated Imitation Skill Training for Children With Autism

Zhi Zheng; Eric M. Young; Amy Swanson; Amy Weitlauf; Zachary Warren; Nilanjan Sarkar

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) impacts 1 in 68 children in the U.S., with tremendous individual and societal costs. Technology-aided intervention, more specifically robotic intervention, has gained momentum in recent years due to the inherent affinity of many children with ASD towards technology. In this paper we present a novel robot-mediated intervention system for imitation skill learning, which is considered a core deficit area for children with ASD. The Robot-mediated Imitation Skill Training Architecture (RISTA) is designed in such a manner that it can operate either completely autonomously or in coordination with a human therapist depending on the intervention need. Experimental results are presented from small user studies validating system functionality, assessing user tolerance, and documenting subject performance. Preliminary results show that this novel robotic system draws more attention from the children with ASD and teaches gestures more effectively as compared to a human therapist. While no broad generalized conclusions can be made about the effectiveness of RISTA based on our small user studies, initial results are encouraging and justify further exploration in the future.


Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology | 2012

Cognitive development masks support for attributional style models of depression in children and adolescents.

Amy Weitlauf; David A. Cole

Attributional style models of depression in adults (Abramson et al. 1989, 1978) have been adapted for use with children; however, most applications do not consider that children’s understanding of causal relations may be qualitatively different from that of adults. If children’s causal attributions depend on children’s level of cognitive development, then support for attributional models of depression in young people will vary with cognitive development. In this paper, a new measure of cognitive development, the Peabody Causal Reasoning Test (PCRT), is introduced to assess children’s understanding of ability versus effort, task difficulty, and luck as causal factors. Analyses revealed that in 8- to 16-year-old children, failure to control for level of cognitive development suppressed empirical support for cognitive diathesis-stress models of depression. Statistically controlling for measures of cognitive development strengthened support for this model.

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Nila A Sathe

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Melissa L McPheeters

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Shanthi Krishnaswami

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Zhi Zheng

Vanderbilt University

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Huan Zhao

Vanderbilt University

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