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Dive into the research topics where Thomas F. Anders is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas F. Anders.


Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 1989

Implications of research on infant development for psychodynamic theory and practice.

Charles H. Zeanah; Thomas F. Anders; Ronald Seifer; Daniel N. Stern

Recent research on infant development is reviewed to consider its implications for psychodynamic theory and practice. To address the question of the importance of early experiences for development, research on continuities and discontinuities in development, temperament, motivational systems in infancy, affect development and regulation, development of the sense of self, and infant-caregiver attachment are reviewed. Two major implications emerge, both emphasizing the need for more complexities in our conceptualizations. First, research on infant development underscores the importance of context in development and cautions about the limits of reductionistic thinking and theories. Second a major paradigmatic shift away from the fixation-regression model of psychopathology and development is indicated. A new model that better fits available data is proposed instead. In this continuous construction model, there is no need for regression, and ontogenetic origins of psychopathology are no longer necessarily tied to specific critical or sensitive periods in development. Implications for psychodynamic treatment are also described.


Journal of Family Psychology | 2018

Household chaos and family sleep during infants’ first year.

Corey J. Whitesell; Brian Crosby; Thomas F. Anders; Douglas M. Teti

Household chaos has been linked with dysregulated family and individual processes. The present study investigated linkages between household chaos and infant and parent sleep, a self-regulated process impacted by individual, social, and environmental factors. Studies of relations between household chaos and child sleep have focused on older children and teenagers, with little attention given to infants or parent sleep. This study examines these relationships using objective measures of household chaos and sleep while controlling for, respectively, maternal emotional availability at bedtime and martial adjustment, in infant and parent sleep. Multilevel modeling examined mean and variability of sleep duration and fragmentation for infants, mothers, and fathers when infants were 1, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months (N = 167). Results indicated infants in higher chaos homes experienced delays in sleep consolidation patterns, with longer and more variable sleep duration, and greater fragmentation. Parent sleep was also associated with household chaos such that in higher chaos homes, mothers and fathers experienced greater variability in sleep duration, which paralleled infant findings. In lower chaos homes, parents’ sleep fragmentation mirrored infants’ decreasingly fragmented sleep across the first year and remained lower at all timepoints compared to parents and infants in high chaos homes. Collectively, these findings indicate that after controlling for maternal emotional availability and marital adjustment (respectively) household chaos has a dysregulatory impact on infant and parent sleep. Results are discussed in terms of the potential for chaos-induced poor sleep to dysregulate daytime functioning and, in turn, place parent-infant relationships at risk.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2017

Brief Report: Factors Influencing Healthcare Satisfaction in Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder.

Alan Gerber; Carolyn McCormick; Todd P. Levine; Eric M. Morrow; Thomas F. Anders; Stephen J. Sheinkopf

The current study investigated healthcare satisfaction and factors related to satisfaction in 92 adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). Participants or their caregiver completed a survey about their experiences with primary care and specialty physicians. Respondents reported a high level of satisfaction with their healthcare. The only factor significantly associated with satisfaction was age, with participants under age 26 reporting significantly higher levels of satisfaction than participants above age 26. Participants under age 26 also were significantly more likely to live at home, have private health insurance, and have others making their healthcare decisions than participants above age 26. Results indicate that healthcare satisfaction can be high for adults with ASD that have good family and community support.


Sleep | 1985

Developmental Course of Nighttime Sleep-Wake Patterns in Full-Term and Premature Infants During the First Year of Life. I.

Thomas F. Anders; Marcia A. Keener


Sleep | 1985

Sleep-wake state organization, neonatal assessment and development in premature infants during the first year of life. II.

Thomas F. Anders; Marcia A. Keener; Helena C. Kraemer


Tradition | 1987

Subjectivity in parent-infant relationships: A discussion of internal working models

Charles H. Zeanah; Thomas F. Anders


Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry | 1986

DEVELOPING PERCEPTIONS OF TEMPERAMENT AND THEIR CHILDREN TO MOTHER AND INFANT BEHAVIOR

Charles H. Zeanah; Marcia A. Keener; Thomas F. Anders


American Journal of Orthopsychiatry | 1987

ADOLESCENT MOTHERS‘ PERCEPTIONS OF THEIR INFANTS BEFORE AND AFTER BIRTH

Charles H. Zeanah; Marcia A. Keener; Thomas F. Anders; Catherine C. Vieira-Baker


Clinical practice in pediatric psychology | 2016

Sibling sleep-What can it tell us about parental sleep reports in the context of autism?

A. J. Schwichtenberg; Tara Hensle; Sarah Morsbach Honaker; Meghan Miller; Sally Ozonoff; Thomas F. Anders


Annual progress in child psychiatry and child development | 1989

Infant temperament, sleep organization, and nighttime parental interventions

M. A. Keener; Charles H. Zeanah; Thomas F. Anders

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Brian Crosby

Pennsylvania State University

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