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Dive into the research topics where Rachel M. Fenning is active.

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Featured researches published by Rachel M. Fenning.


American Journal on Mental Retardation | 2007

Prediction of social skills in 6-year-old children with and without developmental delays: contributions of early regulation and maternal scaffolding.

Jason K. Baker; Rachel M. Fenning; Keith A. Crnic; Bruce L. Baker; Jan Blacher

Childrens emotion dysregulation and maternal scaffolding at age 4 were examined as predictors of social skills at age 6, for 66 children with and 106 without early developmental delays. Observed scaffolding and regulation during frustrating laboratory tasks related to later mother, father, and teacher social-skill ratings for children with delays and were stronger predictors of social skills within this group than were developmental level and early behavior problems. In contrast, fewer associations were found for typically developing children, with early behavior problems providing the only unique prediction to social skills. Data support a model in which dysregulation partially mediates the association between developmental status and social-skill outcomes. Implications for research, prevention, and early intervention are discussed.


Journal of Family Psychology | 2012

Mother-child interaction and resilience in children with early developmental risk.

Rachel M. Fenning; Jason K. Baker

Although prenatal and genetic factors make strong contributions to the emergence of intellectual disability (ID), childrens early environment may have the potential to alter developmental trajectories and to foster resilience in children with early risk. The present study examined mother-child interaction and the promotion of competence in 50 children with early developmental delays. Three related but distinct aspects of mother-child interaction were considered: maternal technical scaffolding, maternal positive sensitivity, and mother-child dyadic pleasure. Children were classified as exhibiting undifferentiated delays at age 3, based upon performance on developmental assessments and the absence of known genetic syndromes. Mother-child interaction was assessed at age 4 through observational ratings of structured laboratory tasks, and through naturalistic home observations. ID was identified at age 5 using the dual criteria of clinically significant delays in cognitive functioning and adaptive behavior. Maternal technical scaffolding and dyadic pleasure each uniquely predicted reduced likelihood of later ID, beyond the contributions of childrens early developmental level and behavioral functioning. Follow-up analyses suggested that mother-child interaction was primarily important to resilience in the area of adaptive behavior, with scaffolding and dyadic pleasure differentially associated with particular subdomains. Implications for theories of intellectual disability and for family-based early intervention and prevention efforts are discussed.


Child Development | 2011

Emotion Discourse, Social Cognition, and Social Skills in Children With and Without Developmental Delays

Rachel M. Fenning; Bruce L. Baker; Jaana Juvonen

This study examined parent-child emotion discourse, childrens independent social information processing, and social skills outcomes in 146 families of 8-year-olds with and without developmental delays. Childrens emergent social-cognitive understanding (internal state understanding, perspective taking, and causal reasoning and problem solving) was coded in the context of parent-child conversations about emotion, and children were interviewed separately to assess social problem solving. Mothers, fathers, and teachers reported on childrens social skills. The proposed strengths-based model partially accounted for social skills differences between typically developing children and children with delays. A multigroup analysis of the model linking emotion discourse to social skills through childrens prosocial problem solving suggested that processes operated similarly for the two groups. Implications for ecologically focused prevention and intervention are discussed.


Journal of Family Psychology | 2014

Parent-child interaction over time in families of young children with borderline intellectual functioning

Rachel M. Fenning; Jason K. Baker; Bruce L. Baker; Keith A. Crnic

A previous study suggested that mothers of 5-year-old children with borderline intellectual functioning displayed lower positive engagement with their children as compared with both mothers of typically developing children and mothers of children with significant developmental delays (Fenning, Baker, Baker, & Crnic, 2007). The current study integrated father data and followed these families over the subsequent 1-year period. Parent and child behavior were coded from naturalistic home observations at both waves. Results revealed that mothers of children with borderline intellectual functioning displayed a greater increase in negative-controlling parenting from child age 5 to 6 than did other mothers; fathers displayed more negative-controlling behavior in comparison to fathers of typically developing children. In addition, children with borderline intellectual functioning themselves exhibited a more significant escalation in difficult behavior than did typically developing children. Cross-lagged analyses for the sample as a whole indicated that maternal negative-controlling behavior predicted subsequent child difficulties, whereas negative paternal behavior was predicted by earlier child behavior. In conjunction with evidence from Fenning et al. (2007), these findings suggest a complex, dynamic, and systemic developmental pattern in the emotional behavior of families of children with borderline intellectual functioning. Implications and areas in need of additional research are discussed.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2017

Electrodermal Variability and Symptom Severity in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder

Rachel M. Fenning; Jason K. Baker; Brian R. Baucom; Stephen A. Erath; Mariann A. Howland; Jacquelyn Moffitt

Associations between variability in sympathetic nervous system arousal and individual differences in symptom severity were examined for children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Thirty-four families participated in a laboratory visit that included continuous measurement of electrodermal activity (EDA) during a battery of naturalistic and structured parent–child, child alone, and direct testing tasks. Multiple indices of EDA were considered. Greater variability in EDA was associated with higher levels of ASD symptoms, with findings generally consistent across tasks. Intellectual functioning did not moderate the relation between EDA and ASD symptoms. Sympathetic arousal tendencies may represent an important individual difference factor for this population. Future directions and conceptualizations of EDA are discussed.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2018

Intrinsic and Extrinsic Predictors of Emotion Regulation in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder

Rachel M. Fenning; Jason K. Baker; Jacquelyn Moffitt

Difficulties regulating emotion have been linked to comorbid psychopathology in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), but little empirical work has examined predictors of dysregulation in this population. Forty-six families of children with ASD participated in a laboratory visit that included direct measurement of children’s IQ, ASD symptoms, and psychophysiological reactivity. Child emotion regulation was observed during independent and co-regulatory tasks, and parental scaffolding was rated in the dyadic context. ASD symptom severity emerged as the strongest predictor of child emotion dysregulation across contexts. Child age and parental scaffolding also uniquely predicted child dysregulation in the dyadic task. Implications for conceptualizing intrinsic and extrinsic influences on emergent emotion regulation in children with ASD are discussed, as are applications to intervention.


American Journal on Mental Retardation | 2007

Parenting Children With Borderline Intellectual Functioning: A Unique Risk Population

Rachel M. Fenning; Jason K. Baker; Bruce L. Baker; Keith A. Crnic


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2015

Brief Report: A Pilot Study of Parent-Child Biobehavioral Synchrony in Autism Spectrum Disorder.

Jason K. Baker; Rachel M. Fenning; Mariann A. Howland; Brian R. Baucom; Jacquelyn Moffitt; Stephen A. Erath


Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology | 2017

Sympathetic Under-Arousal and Externalizing Behavior Problems in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder

Jason K. Baker; Rachel M. Fenning; Stephen A. Erath; Brian R. Baucom; Jacquelyn Moffitt; Mariann A. Howland


Mindfulness | 2018

Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction for Parents of Children with Developmental Delays: Understanding the Experiences of Latino Families

Cameron L. Neece; Neilson Chan; Keith P. Klein; Lisa R. Roberts; Rachel M. Fenning

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Jason K. Baker

California State University

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Bruce L. Baker

University of California

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Jacquelyn Moffitt

California State University

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Keith A. Crnic

Arizona State University

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Mariann A. Howland

California State University

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Jaana Juvonen

University of California

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Jan Blacher

University of California

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