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Dive into the research topics where Dawn M. Gondoli is active.

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Featured researches published by Dawn M. Gondoli.


Journal of Family Psychology | 2007

Examining the process by which marital adjustment affects maternal warmth : The role of coparenting support as a mediator

Darya D. Bonds; Dawn M. Gondoli

This study assessed the longitudinal process by which marital adjustment affects change in maternal warmth over time. Change in coparenting support was examined as the potential mechanism by which the marriage affects parenting. Self-report data were gathered from 148 married mothers of first-born 4th graders at 3 time points, over the transition to early adolescence. Path analyses supported the proposed hypothesis, indicating that marital adjustment leads to increased coparenting support, which then leads to increased maternal warmth. Two alternative models of the time-ordered direction of effects among the study variables were ruled out. This study has important implications for the development of parenting interventions targeting the promotion of maternal warmth.


Parenting: Science and Practice | 2002

Parenting Stress as a Mediator of the Relation Between Parenting Support and Optimal Parenting

Darya D. Bonds; Dawn M. Gondoli; Melissa L. Sturge-Apple; Lindsay N. Salem

Objective. This study assessed the direct and indirect relations between 2 types of social support - parenting support and general social support - and optimal parenting. Design. Self-report data were gathered from 165 married mothers of firstborn 4th-graders between the ages of 9 and 11 years. Widely accepted measures of warmth, monitoring, general psychological distress, parenting stress, and general social support were used. A measure of parenting support from family and friends was developed for this study. Results. Path analysis indicated that the relation between specific parenting support and optimal parenting was completely mediated by parenting stress and not by general psychological distress. The relation between general social support and optimal parenting was not completely mediated by either parenting stress or general psychological distress. Conclusions. This study integrated essential components from the social support, stress and coping, and parenting research. The authors identify parenting stress as a mediator of the relation between parenting support and optimal parenting by focusing on the specificity of social support and stress in the domain of parenting.


Child Neuropsychology | 2011

Component analysis of verbal versus spatial working memory training in adolescents with ADHD: A randomized, controlled trial

Bradley S. Gibson; Dawn M. Gondoli; Ann C. Johnson; Christine M. Steeger; Bradley A. Dobrzenski; Rebecca A. Morrissey

Adaptive training of working memory (WM) using the Cogmed-RM intervention has recently shown some efficacy as an alternative treatment for ADHD, but this intervention may not be optimally designed. A recent component analysis of WM has suggested that maintenance in primary memory (PM) appears to be largely intact whereas recall from secondary memory (SM) appears to be deficient in ADHD relative to age-matched controls. However, extrapolating from basic research, there is reason to believe that Cogmed-RM may target the PM component more than the SM component; though training with spatial exercises may target the SM component more than training with verbal exercises. To investigate, participants diagnosed with ADHD were randomly assigned to either a verbal training condition (n = 24) or a spatial training condition (n = 23) using a randomized, controlled design, and both groups were instructed to complete at least 20 days of training. The PM and SM components of WM were assessed immediately before and after training using both verbal and spatial free recall tasks. The main findings showed that both versions of the intervention enhanced the maintenance of information in PM regardless of test modality, but not the recall of information from SM. Therefore, the component of WM that is improved by Cogmed-RM is not the same component of WM that is deficient in ADHD.


Journal of Family Psychology | 1993

Factor structure within and across three family-assessment procedures

Dawn M. Gondoli; Theodore Jacob

Higher order factor structures within and across the Family Environment Scale (FES), the Family Assessment Measure (FAM), and Family Adaptability and Cohesion Evaluation Scales III were examined. A sample of 138 families was obtained; separate analyses were conducted for mothers, facthers, and their adolescent children.


Psychological Assessment | 1998

Structure and Validity of Parent and Teacher Perceptions of Children's Competence: A Multitrait-Multimethod-Multigroup Investigation.

David A. Cole; Dawn M. Gondoli; Lachlan G. Peeke

Parents and teachers completed their respective versions of S. Harters (1985b) Rating Scale of Childrens Actual Behavior to assess 5 domains of competence in 321 3rd- and 403 6th-grade children. Peers completed a peer nomination index of multiple competencies. Confirmatory factor analyses revealed 5 factors in both the teacher and parent scales: Academic Competence, Social Acceptance, Athletic Competence, Physical Appearance, and Behavioral Conduct. Two higher order factors also emerged: a Well-Behaved/Good Student factor and an Athletic/Attractive/Popular factor. All 5 subscales of the teacher and parent scales manifested a high degree of discriminant validity. Significant levels of convergent validity emerged for most of these subscales.


Journal of Early Adolescence | 2011

A 4-Year Longitudinal Investigation of the Processes by Which Parents and Peers Influence the Development of Early Adolescent Girls' Bulimic Symptoms.

Elizabeth H. Blodgett Salafia; Dawn M. Gondoli

Bulimic symptoms are fairly common among adolescent girls, and the dual pathway model outlines one possible etiological chain leading to bulimic symptoms. The present study seeks to longitudinally examine the pathways proposed by this model while focusing on the relative contribution of parents and peers (via direct encouragement or pressure to be thin and indirect discussion of dieting). Four years of self-report data were collected from 85 early adolescent girls during fifth through eighth grades. Results indicated that mothers, fathers, and peers each played an important role in the development of girls’ bulimic symptoms by affecting their body dissatisfaction, which was related to later dieting behaviors, depressive symptoms, and bulimic symptoms. Furthermore, results suggested that peers were a stronger influence than mothers and fathers. The authors conclude that both parents and peers play important roles in girls’ development of bulimic symptoms, and future work should especially include peers.


Body Image | 2011

Heterosocial involvement, peer pressure for thinness, and body dissatisfaction among young adolescent girls

Dawn M. Gondoli; Alexandra F. Corning; Elizabeth H. Blodgett Salafia; Michaela M. Bucchianeri; Ellen E. Fitzsimmons

The purpose of this study was to examine longitudinal connections among young adolescent heterosocial involvement (i.e., mixed-sex interactions), peer pressure for thinness, and body dissatisfaction. Three years of self-report questionnaire data were collected from 88 adolescent girls as they completed 6th through 8th grades. Results indicated that the relation between heterosocial involvement and body dissatisfaction was mediated by perceived peer pressure for thinness. Within this model, heterosocial involvement was associated with greater peer pressure for thinness. In turn, peer pressure for thinness was associated with greater body dissatisfaction. Results are discussed in terms of their implications for prevention and intervention efforts aimed at girls during their middle-school years.


Memory & Cognition | 2013

Exploration of an adaptive training regimen that can target the secondary memory component of working memory capacity

Bradley S. Gibson; Dawn M. Gondoli; William G. Kronenberger; Ann C. Johnson; Christine M. Steeger; Rebecca A. Morrissey

The dual-component model contends that working memory (WM) capacity consists of two components. The first is a flexible attention component that involves the active maintenance of a limited amount of information in primary memory (PM), and the second is a controlled retrieval component that involves a cue-dependent search of secondary memory (SM) for information that has been lost from PM. Recent evidence has suggested that the adaptive WM training regimen known as “Cogmed-RM” is not optimally designed, because it only targets PM abilities, not SM abilities. The present study was conducted to investigate whether Cogmed-RM could be modified to target SM abilities by decreasing the recall accuracy threshold that defines individual ability during training. The main findings suggested that the SM component of WM capacity could be targeted by lowering the recall accuracy threshold. The present findings are important because they suggest that adaptive training regimens can be designed that selectively target specific components of WM capacity, and they raise the possibility that the potency of existing training regimens can be increased.


Child Neuropsychology | 2009

Application of the dual-component model of working memory to ADHD.

Bradley S. Gibson; Dawn M. Gondoli; Ann C. Flies; Bradley A. Dobrzenski; Nash Unsworth

Attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has been associated with a deficit in working memory across both verbal and spatial domains, but the precise nature of this deficit is poorly understood. The dual-component model postulates that working memory capacity consists of two dissociable components: maintenance in primary memory (PM) and recall from secondary memory (SM). Participants diagnosed with ADHD (n = 32) and age-matched controls (n = 31) performed both verbal and spatial free-recall tasks, and subsets of these two samples were selected for further comparison based on their use of a “recency” order-of-report strategy. The primary results showed that maintenance in PM appears to be largely intact whereas recall from SM appears to be deficient in ADHD relative to age-matched controls. Similar outcomes were observed across both task domains. Implications for understanding both the underlying pathology and treatment of ADHD are discussed.


Body Image | 2012

Who is most likely to fat talk? A social comparison perspective.

Alexandra F. Corning; Dawn M. Gondoli

Negative talk about food, weight, or the body that occurs commonly among women--fat talk--is gaining increasing attention. Whereas its negative eating pathology and body esteem correlates have received continued empirical validation, what is not yet known is who is most likely to fat talk. We propose that social comparison processes underlie and motivate much of fat talk. In a sample of 143 college women, we found evidence for the role of social comparison. First, having a stronger tendency to socially compare directly predicts fat talk. Second, as a womans body image concerns increase, her likelihood of engaging in fat talk increases, and this is intensified if she has a greater tendency to socially compare. Finally, social comparison propensity begins to exert its exacerbating effects at surprisingly low levels of body image concern. Results are discussed in terms of the advantages of using a social comparison perspective to better understand fat talk.

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Ann C. Johnson

University of Notre Dame

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Darya D. Bonds

Arizona State University

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