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Featured researches published by Jinni Su.


Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology | 2013

Factor Structure of the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale:

Andrew J. Supple; Jinni Su; Scott W. Plunkett; Gary W. Peterson; Kevin R. Bush

This study evaluated the factor structure of the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale (RSES) with a diverse sample of 1,248 European American, Latino, Armenian, and Iranian adolescents. Adolescents completed the 10-item RSES during school as part of a larger study on parental influences and academic outcomes. Findings suggested that method effects in the RSES are more strongly associated with negatively worded items across three diverse groups but also more pronounced among ethnic minority adolescents. Findings also suggested that accounting for method effects is necessary to avoid biased conclusions regarding cultural differences in self-esteem and how predictors are related to the RSES. Moreover, the two RSES factors (positive self-esteem and negative self-esteem) were differentially predicted by parenting behaviors and academic motivation. Substantive and methodological implications of these findings for cross-cultural research on adolescent self-esteem are discussed.


Journal of Family Issues | 2015

Links Between Remembered Childhood Emotion Socialization and Adult Adjustment: Similarities and Differences Between European American and African American Women

Esther M. Leerkes; Andrew J. Supple; Jinni Su; Alyson M. Cavanaugh

The purpose of this article was to examine whether recollections of mothers’ emotion socialization practices during childhood are linked to adult emotional well-being as indexed by depression, trait anger, and cardiac vagal tone, and whether these effects vary for African American and European American women. Participants included 251 women (128 European American, 123 African American) who ranged in age from 18 to 44 years (M = 25 years). Multigroup confirmatory factor analyses indicated strong measurement and factor invariance across African American and European American participants. Remembered nonsupportive emotion socialization was linked with elevated depressive symptoms for European American women but not African American women and with elevated trait anger for both groups. Remembered supportive emotion socialization was linked with higher resting vagal tone for both groups. The results provide some support for the view that nonsupportive emotion socialization may be more detrimental for European Americans than African Americans.


Death Studies | 2013

Ethnic, Gender, and Age Differences in Adolescent Nonfatal Suicidal Behaviors

Andrew J. Supple; Kelly N. Graves; Stephanie S. Daniel; Lisa Kiang; Jinni Su; Alyson M. Cavanaugh

This study examined ethnic differences in adolescent nonfatal suicidal behaviors as well as age and gender variation both across and within ethnic groups. Using a large (n = 14, 346) sample of adolescents in Grades 7 through 12, African Americans reported relatively high rates of suicidal thoughts and attempts and Southeast Asians reported high rates of suicidal thoughts. Hispanic Americans, European Americans, and Asian Americans were similar in their reports of nonfatal suicidal behaviors. Gender differences also varied across ethnicity as Southeast Asian boys (particularly older boys) reported more suicidal thoughts and attempts than Southeast Asian girls.


Journal of Ethnicity in Substance Abuse | 2014

Parental, Peer, School, and Neighborhood Influences on Adolescent Substance Use: Direct and Indirect Effects and Ethnic Variations

Jinni Su; Andrew J. Supple

The current study examined how contextual influences are related to adolescent substance use using an ethnically diverse sample of adolescents. A total of 5,992 adolescents (5,185 European American, 330 African American, 160 Hispanic American, 179 Asian American, and 138 Southeast Asian American) from Dane county, Wisconsin, completed surveys at school. Structural equation modeling was conducted to examine direct versus indirect effects of parental, peer, school, and neighborhood influences and differences in associations across ethnicity. Results indicated that contextual influences on adolescent substance use were both direct and indirect; the strength of associations between contextual influences and adolescent substance use varied across ethnic groups.


Genes, Brain and Behavior | 2018

Post-GWAS in Psychiatric Genetics: A Developmental Perspective on the “Other” Next Steps

Danielle M. Dick; Peter B. Barr; Seung Bin Cho; Megan E. Cooke; Sally I-Chun Kuo; Tenesha J. Lewis; Zoe Neale; Jessica E. Salvatore; Jeanne E. Savage; Jinni Su

As psychiatric genetics enters an era where gene identification is finally yielding robust, replicable genetic associations and polygenic risk scores, it is important to consider next steps and delineate how that knowledge will be applied to ultimately ameliorate suffering associated with substance use and psychiatric disorders. Much of the post‐genome‐wide association study discussion has focused on the potential of genetic information to elucidate the underlying biology and use this information for the development of more effective pharmaceutical treatments. In this review we focus on additional areas of research that should follow gene identification. By taking genetic findings into longitudinal, developmental studies, we can map the pathways by which genetic risk manifests across development, elucidating the early behavioral manifestations of risk, and studying how various environments and interventions moderate that risk across developmental stages. The delineation of risk across development will advance our understanding of mechanism, sex differences and risk and resilience processes in different racial/ethnic groups. Here, we review how the extant twin study literature can be used to guide these efforts. Together, these new lines of research will enable us to develop more informed, tailored prevention and intervention efforts.


Journal of Family Psychology | 2018

DRD4 interacts with adverse life events in predicting maternal sensitivity via emotion regulation.

Jinni Su; Esther M. Leerkes; Mairin E. Augustine

We examined whether and how the dopamine receptor D4 (DRD4) interacts with adverse life events to predict maternal sensitivity directly and indirectly via emotion regulation. The sample included 209 (106 European American, 103 African American) mothers and their children (52% female). Sensitive maternal behavior was rated and aggregated across five stress-free and stress-inducing tasks when children were about 2 years old, when mothers also retrospectively reported on their adverse life experiences and transitions throughout childhood from birth to age 20. When children were about 1 year old, mothers reported on their difficulties with emotion regulation. Results from path analysis indicated that mothers who carried the long allele of DRD4 and experienced more adverse life events were less sensitive in interactions with their children. These mothers were also more likely to have difficulties with emotion regulation, which in turn predicted lower maternal sensitivity. These effects were significant above and beyond the effects of maternal education, coherence of mind, race, or infants’ DRD4 genotype, and did not vary for African American and European American mothers. Results suggest that genetic predispositions modify the effects of maternal experience of adverse life events on maternal sensitivity and that emotion regulation serves as one mechanism by which genetic factors and gene–environment interactions affect maternal behavior.


Journal of Personality Assessment | 2017

Establishing the Measurement Invariance of the Very Short Form of the Infant Behavior Questionnaire Revised for Mothers Who Vary on Race and Poverty Status

Esther M. Leerkes; Jinni Su; Beth Reboussin; Stephanie S. Daniel; Chris C. Payne; Joseph G. Grzywacz

ABSTRACT We examined the measurement invariance of the Infant Behavior Questionnaire Revised–Very Short Form (IBQR–VSF; Putnam, Helbig, Gartstein, Rothbart, & Leerkes, 2014) in a sample of 470 racially (185 White, 285 African American) and socioeconomically diverse mothers (158 below federal poverty threshold, 296 above federal poverty threshold) of infants. Using multigroup confirmatory factor analysis, we demonstrated configural, full metric, and full scalar invariance demonstrating that the 3-factor structure (negative emotionality, positive affectivity/surgency, orienting/regulatory capacity), pattern of item loadings, and item means were comparable for White and African American mothers, and for poor and not poor mothers. In addition, we demonstrated full error invariance across racial groups and partial error variance invariance across poverty status, demonstrating that item reliability was comparable for White and African American mothers, and both those above and below the poverty line (with the exception of a subset of items). Thus, the IBQR–VSF appears appropriate for use in racially and socioeconomically diverse samples.


Journal of Family Psychology | 2014

Economic pressure, cultural adaptation stress, and marital quality among Mexican-origin couples.

Heather M. Helms; Andrew J. Supple; Jinni Su; Yuliana Rodriguez; Alyson M. Cavanaugh; Natalie D. Hengstebeck


Journal of Family Psychology | 2016

Pathways by which mothers' physiological arousal and regulation while caregiving predict sensitivity to infant distress.

Esther M. Leerkes; Jinni Su; Susan D. Calkins; Andrew J. Supple; Marion O'Brien


Development and Psychopathology | 2017

Maternal physiological dysregulation while parenting poses risk for infant attachment disorganization and behavior problems.

Esther M. Leerkes; Jinni Su; Susan D. Calkins; Marion O'Brien; Andrew J. Supple

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Andrew J. Supple

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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Esther M. Leerkes

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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Sally I-Chun Kuo

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Alyson M. Cavanaugh

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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Danielle M. Dick

Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis

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Marc A. Schuckit

Washington University in St. Louis

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Marion O'Brien

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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