Katharine R. Lawson
Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Katharine R. Lawson.
Developmental Psychology | 1990
Holly A. Ruff; Katharine R. Lawson
The purpose of this project was to investigate the maintenance of focused attention in the first 5 years. In Study 1,67 children were seen at 1, 2 and 3.5 years of age in free play with a number ofage-appropriate toys. In Study 2, children at 2.5, 3.5, and 4.5 years were also seen in free play
Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics | 2004
Katharine R. Lawson; Holly A. Ruff
ABSTRACT. There is evidence that early focused, but not casual, attention to objects reflects concurrent regulation of attention and active learning. Because attentional abilities are of particular relevance in preterm infants, we evaluated whether early focused attention would be a better predictor of later attention and cognitive function than casual attention in 55 children born at very low birth weight. Participants were tested initially at 7 months and then at 2, 3, and/or 4/5 years of age. Focused attention was defined as the duration of concentrated examination of objects during independent play. Outcome measures were maternal ratings on standard attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder rating scales and standardized cognitive assessments. Results indicate that 7-month focused attention was predictive of reported problems in hyperactivity/impulsivity at age 4/5 years and cognitive abilities at 2, 3, and 4/5 years; casual attention measures were not related to these outcomes. Early focused attention appears continuous with later attentional skills in at-risk infants and is related to cognitive abilities through the preschool years.
International Journal of Behavioral Development | 2004
Katharine R. Lawson; Holly A. Ruff
Negative emotionality and poor attention may combine or interact as risk factors in development. Negative emotionality is considered a challenge for self-regulation, whereas good attention is a potential means of self-regulation. In the current study, composites of 1- and 2-year maternal ratings of negative emotionality and global ratings of observed attentiveness were predictors for 3.5-year cognitive and behavioural outcome for 75 children. Results of variable-based regression analyses indicated that early negativity and attentiveness predicted IQ and scores on a hyperactivity index; only negativity predicted a global measure of behaviour problems. Results of person-based analyses for groups formed by median splits on negativity and attention suggested that the More Negative/Less Attentive group had significantly poorer outcome than the other three groups combined (those with one or none of the two risk factors). Comparisons of mean differences also suggested a protective effect of greater attentiveness for more negative as opposed to less negative children for all outcomes. The results extend prior work in providing longitudinal data over the first 3 years and including both cognitive and behavioural outcomes.
Journal of Child Neurology | 2014
Maria Valicenti-McDermott; Bethany Burrows; Leora Bernstein; Kathryn Hottinger; Katharine R. Lawson; Rosa Seijo; Merryl Schechtman; Lisa Shulman; Shlomo Shinnar
The use of complementary and alternative medicine by children with autism and the association of its use with child comorbid symptoms and parental stress was studied in an ethnically diverse population, in a cross-sectional study with structured interviews. The sample included 50 families of children with autism and 50 families of children with other developmental disabilities, matched by age/gender. Interview included the Complementary and Alternative Medicine Questionnaire, Gastrointestinal Questionnaire, Children’s Sleep Habits Questionnaire, Aberrant Behavior Checklist, and Parenting Stress Index. In this ethnically diverse sample, the use of complementary and alternative medicine was significantly higher for the autism group. In the autism group, use was significantly related to child’s irritability, hyperactivity, food allergies, and parental stress; in the developmental disabilities group, there was no association with child comorbid symptoms or parental stress. The results contribute information to health care providers about families of children with autism who are more likely to use complementary and alternative medicine.
Journal of Child Neurology | 2015
Maria Valicenti-McDermott; Katharine R. Lawson; Kathryn Hottinger; Rosa Seijo; Merryl Schechtman; Lisa Shulman; Shlomo Shinnar
The level of parental stress in families of children with autism and other developmental disabilities and its association with child comorbid symptoms was studied in an ethnically diverse population, in a cross-sectional study with structured interview. The sample included 50 families of children with autism and 50 families of children with other developmental disabilities, matched by age/gender. Interview included Parenting Stress Index–Short Form, Gastrointestinal Questionnaire, Child Sleep Habits Questionnaire, and Aberrant Behavior Checklist. In this ethnically diverse sample, parental stress was significantly higher for the autism group and for non-Hispanic and US-born mothers. In both study groups, parental stress was related to child irritability. Parental stress was also related to gastrointestinal problems in the autism group and to sleep difficulties in the developmental disabilities group. Targeting child irritability may be particularly important in reducing parental stress for families of children with autism and other developmental disabilities.
Child Development | 1990
Holly A. Ruff; Katharine R. Lawson; Roseanne Parrinello; Renata Weissberg
Pediatrics | 1997
Koller H; Katharine R. Lawson; Susan A. Rose; Ina F. Wallace; Cecelia McCarton
Infant Behavior & Development | 1992
Katharine R. Lawson; Roseanne Parrinello; Holly A. Ruff
Developmental Psychology | 1980
Katharine R. Lawson
Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics | 1990
Renata Weissberg; Holly A. Ruff; Katharine R. Lawson