Lauren Spies Shapiro
University of Southern California
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Featured researches published by Lauren Spies Shapiro.
Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review | 2014
Lauren Spies Shapiro; Gayla Margolin
Since the advent of social networking site (SNS) technologies, adolescents’ use of these technologies has expanded and is now a primary way of communicating with and acquiring information about others in their social network. Overall, adolescents and young adults’ stated motivations for using SNSs are quite similar to more traditional forms of communication—to stay in touch with friends, make plans, get to know people better, and present oneself to others. We begin with a summary of theories that describe the role of SNSs in adolescents’ interpersonal relationships, as well as common methodologies used in this field of research thus far. Then, with the social changes that occur throughout adolescence as a backdrop, we address the ways in which SNSs intersect with key tasks of adolescent psychosocial development, specifically peer affiliation and friendship quality, as well as identity development. Evidence suggests that SNSs differentially relate to adolescents’ social connectivity and identity development, with sociability, self-esteem, and nature of SNS feedback as important potential moderators. We synthesize current findings, highlight unanswered questions, and recommend both methodological and theoretical directions for future research.
Child Development | 2012
Darby E. Saxbe; Gayla Margolin; Lauren Spies Shapiro; Brian R. Baucom
Is an attenuated physiological response to family conflict, seen in some youth exposed to early adversity, protective or problematic? A longitudinal study including 54 youth (average age 15.2 years) found that those with higher cumulative family aggression exposure showed lower cortisol output during a laboratory-based conflict discussion with their parents, and were less likely to show the normative pattern of increased cortisol reactivity to a discussion they rated as more conflictual. Family aggression interacted with cortisol reactivity in predicting youth adjustment: Adolescents from more aggressive homes who were also more reactive to the discussion reported more posttraumatic stress symptoms and more antisocial behavior. These results suggest that attenuated reactivity may protect youth from the negative consequences associated with aggressive family environments.
Journal of Research on Adolescence | 2013
Esti Iturralde; Gayla Margolin; Lauren Spies Shapiro
This study investigated links between interparental conflict appraisals (specifically threat and self-blame), sibling relationship quality (positive and negative dimensions), and anxiety in sibling pairs comprised of an adolescent and a younger sibling close in age. Sibling relationship quality was measured through behavioral observation. Links between self-blame and anxiety were moderated by sibling relationship quality. In older siblings, positive behavior with a sibling was associated with an attenuated relation between self-blame and anxiety. A paradoxical moderating effect was found for negative interactions; for both younger and older siblings, a relation between self-blame and anxiety was weakened in the presence of sibling negativity. Results offered support for theorized benefits of sibling relationship quality in helping early adolescents adjust to conflict between parents.
Health Psychology | 2018
Kelly F. Miller; Reout Arbel; Lauren Spies Shapiro; Sohyun C. Han; Gayla Margolin
Objectives: Childhood adversity is a risk factor for the development of obesity in adulthood. Dysregulated hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) activity, which has been associated separately with both adverse childhood experiences and obesity, has been posited as a mechanism by which stressful experiences influence body mass index (BMI); however, this mechanism has not yet been tested longitudinally. The present study uses multireporter, longitudinal data across three time points to test whether the adolescent cortisol awakening response (CAR), an index of diurnal HPA activity, mediates the association between adversity in childhood and BMI in adulthood. Method: Eighty-two youth, mothers, and fathers reported on adverse childhood experiences from middle childhood to late adolescence. During adolescence, youth provided saliva samples three times each morning across three days, which were assayed for cortisol to calculate CAR. During early adulthood, youth reported height and weight to calculate BMI. Results: Greater adversity predicted flatter CAR and higher young adult BMI. Flatter CAR partially mediated the association between childhood adversity and young adult BMI. Conclusions: Stress-related alterations to HPA activity account in part for the childhood adversity–adult obesity link. Findings are consistent with theoretical models implicating HPA alterations as linking childhood adversity to metabolic and behavioral determinants of BMI in adulthood.
Health Psychology | 2014
Darby E. Saxbe; Gayla Margolin; Lauren Spies Shapiro; Michelle C. Ramos; Aubrey J. Rodriguez; Esti Iturralde
Journal of Research on Adolescence | 2017
Kelly F. Miller; Gayla Margolin; Lauren Spies Shapiro; Adela C. Timmons
Journal of Research on Adolescence | 2018
Marie-Ève Daspe; Reout Arbel; Michelle C. Ramos; Lauren Spies Shapiro; Gayla Margolin
Journal of Adolescent Health | 2017
Reout Arbel; Lauren Spies Shapiro; Adela C. Timmons; Ilana Kellerman Moss; Gayla Margolin
Archive | 2015
Gayla Margolin; Lauren Spies Shapiro; Kelly F. Miller
Archive | 2015
Reout Arbel; Lauren Spies Shapiro; Ilana Kellerman; Michelle C. Ramos; Adela C. Timmons; Gayla Margolin