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Dive into the research topics where Samuel E. Ehrenreich is active.

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Featured researches published by Samuel E. Ehrenreich.


Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology | 2014

Adolescents’ Text Message Communication and Growth in Antisocial Behavior Across the First Year of High School

Samuel E. Ehrenreich; Marion K. Underwood; Robert A. Ackerman

This study examined whether adolescents communicate about antisocial topics and behaviors via text messaging and how adolescents’ antisocial text message communication relates to growth in rule-breaking and aggression as reported by youth, parents, and teachers. Participants (n = 172; 82 girls) received BlackBerry devices configured to capture all text messages sent and received. Four days of text messages during the 9th grade year were coded for discussion of antisocial activities. The majority of participants engaged in at least some antisocial text message communication. Text messaging about antisocial activities significantly predicted increases in parent, teacher, and self-reports of adolescents’ rule-breaking behavior, as well as teacher and self-reports of adolescents’ aggressive behavior. Text message communication may provide instrumental information about how to engage in antisocial behavior and reinforce these behaviors as normative within the peer group.


American Psychologist | 2017

The power and the pain of adolescents' digital communication: Cyber victimization and the perils of lurking

Marion K. Underwood; Samuel E. Ehrenreich

Many adolescents are heavily engaged with social media and text messaging (George & Odgers, 2015; Lenhart, 2015), yet few psychologists have studied what digital communication means for adolescents’ relationships and adjustment. This article proposes that psychologists should embrace the careful study of adolescents’ digital communication. We discuss theoretical frameworks for understanding adolescents’ involvement with social media, present less widely recognized perils of intense involvement with social media, and highlight positive features of digital communication. Coconstruction theory suggests that adolescents help to create the content of digital communication that shapes their lives, and that there may be strong continuity between adolescents’ offline and online lives (Subrahmanyam, Smahel, & Greenfield, 2006). However, psychological theories and research methods could further illuminate the power and the pain of adolescents’ digital communication. Psychologists need to understand more about subtle but potentially serious risks that adolescents might face: The agony of victimization by even a single episode of cyberbullying and the pain of social exclusion and comparison resulting from vast amounts of time reading large social media feeds and seeing friends doing things without you and comparing your inner emotional experience to everyone else’s highly groomed depictions of their seemingly marvelous lives. If we seek to understand developmental psychopathology and to help youth at risk, psychologists need to embrace careful study of the content of adolescents’ online communication, parents need to talk with their children about their own online experiences and become familiar with social media themselves, and clinicians need to address adolescents’ online social lives in prevention and treatment programs.


Theory Into Practice | 2014

Bullying May Be Fueled by the Desperate Need to Belong

Marion K. Underwood; Samuel E. Ehrenreich

Human beings have a fundamental need to belong, for ongoing positive interactions with others who provide companionship and caring (Baumeister & Leary, 1995). Children may hit, exclude, or harass others electronically because when their own needs for belongingness are threatened, or when they want to enhance their own status, they lash out and hurt others in the way they think will be most painful, by engaging in behaviors that undermine the targets sense of belongingness. For reasons discussed herein, children and adolescents might be especially vulnerable to desperate needs for belongingness. Viewing bullying as motivated by the need to belong has profound implications for prevention and intervention programs to reduce bullying.


Developmental Psychology | 2012

The BlackBerry Project: Capturing the Content of Adolescents' Text Messaging.

Marion K. Underwood; Lisa H. Rosen; David More; Samuel E. Ehrenreich; Joanna K. Gentsch


Social Development | 2015

Prosocial Behavior: Long-Term Trajectories and Psychosocial Outcomes.

Elinor Flynn; Samuel E. Ehrenreich; Kurt J. Beron; Marion K. Underwood


Journal of Research on Adolescence | 2015

The BlackBerry Project: The Hidden World of Adolescents' Text Messaging and Relations With Internalizing Symptoms

Marion K. Underwood; Samuel E. Ehrenreich; David More; Jerome S. Solis; Dawn Y. Brinkley


Aggressive Behavior | 2014

Family predictors of continuity and change in social and physical aggression from ages 9 to 18.

Samuel E. Ehrenreich; Kurt J. Beron; Dawn Y. Brinkley; Marion K. Underwood


Translational Issues in Psychological Science | 2016

Adolescents’ internalizing symptoms as predictors of the content of their Facebook communication and responses received from peers.

Samuel E. Ehrenreich; Marion K. Underwood


Developmental Psychology | 2016

Social and physical aggression trajectories from childhood through late adolescence: Predictors of psychosocial maladjustment at age 18.

Samuel E. Ehrenreich; Kurt J. Beron; Marion K. Underwood


Computers in Human Behavior | 2017

Sending and receiving text messages with sexual content: Relations with early sexual activity and borderline personality features in late adolescence

Dawn Y. Brinkley; Robert A. Ackerman; Samuel E. Ehrenreich; Marion K. Underwood

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Marion K. Underwood

University of Texas at Dallas

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Dawn Y. Brinkley

University of Texas at Dallas

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Kurt J. Beron

University of Texas at Austin

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David More

University of Texas at Dallas

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Joanna K. Gentsch

University of Texas at Dallas

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Lisa H. Rosen

Texas Woman's University

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Robert A. Ackerman

University of Texas at Dallas

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Elinor Flynn

University of Texas at Dallas

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Jerome S. Solis

University of Texas at Dallas

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