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Featured researches published by Ute Ziegenhain.


Journal of Genetic Psychology | 1997

Children's Ability to Delay Gratification: Longitudinal Relations to Mother—Child Attachment

Teresa Jacobsen; Michael Huss; Michael Fendrich; Markus J.P. Kruesi; Ute Ziegenhain

Concurrent and longitudinal mother-child attachment qualities were studied in relation to childrens ability to postpone gratification at age 6 years. A sample of 32 children (at ages 12 months and 18 months) and their mothers participated in the strange situation procedure. At age 6 years, they were observed in an attachment situation and administered a standard delay of gratification task. The length of time that children were able to delay gratification at age 6 was predicted both by concurrent attachment quality and by a longitudinal attachment measure. Children with secure attachment were able to wait the longest periods of time, whereas those with insecure-disorganized attachment had the most difficulties in waiting. The effects of longitudinal, but not concurrent, attachment quality on childrens total waiting time remained significant when other important variables were considered, including gender and childrens cognitive functioning. An interactive effect was found between attachment quality and cognitive functioning. Insecure-avoidantly attached children with high cognitive functioning did not differ in their overall waiting times from securely attached children, but insecure-avoidantly attached children with average or low cognitive functioning did have shorter waiting times. The study provides a basis for the further investigation of mother-child attachment quality as a factor that is linked to childrens delay behavior.


Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry | 2000

Maternal Expressed Emotion Related to Attachment Disorganization in Early Childhood: A Preliminary Report

Teresa Jacobsen; Euthymia D. Hibbs; Ute Ziegenhain

Using a longitudinal sample of children, this study examined the relation between maternal Expressed Emotion (EE) and mother-child attachment disorganization at age 6 years. A nonclinical sample of 33 children (at ages 12 months and 18 months) from Berlin, Germany participated with their mothers in Ainsworths Strange Situation. Thirty-two children were again observed with their mothers at age 6 years in a standard laboratory attachment observation. At the time of the 6-year assessment, maternal EE was assessed based on a Five-Minute Speech Sample. Mothers also completed the Life Events Questionnaire, a measure of family stress, and the Present State Examination, a measure of maternal depression. Maternal Expressed Emotion was significantly linked to mother-child attachment security at age 6 years. Further analyses revealed that High EE was most closely linked to the disorganized attachment pattern at age 6 years, an at-risk attachment pattern that has been associated with intrusive and hostile maternal behavior. The relationship was upheld when other relevant variables, including infant attachment disorganization and a measure of perceived family stress, were simultaneously considered. The study provides independent validation of Expressed Emotion as a measure of relationship quality in early childhood. It also provides a basis for the further investigation of the nature of the relation between maternal Expressed Emotion and attachment disorganization.


Journal of Genetic Psychology | 1999

Assessing children's representational attachment models : Links to mother-child attachment quality in infancy and childhood

Ute Ziegenhain; Teresa Jacobsen

The authors examined whether the finding of a correspondence between specific behavioral patterns of attachment in infancy and childhood and specific representational patterns in childhood could be replicated using childrens responses to a story depicting an imagined parent-child separation experience. The participants were 33 German mothers and their children (16 girls, 17 boys). Attachment quality was assessed via standard and exploratory attachment observations at ages 12 months, 18 months, and 6 years. Chi-square analyses indicated that there was a good level of concordance between the behavioral and representation attachment patterns in infancy and childhood.


Archive | 2000

Stability and change in infant–mother attachment in the second year of life: Relations to parenting quality and varying degrees of day-care experience.

Hellgard Rauh; Ute Ziegenhain; Bernd Müller; Lex Wijnroks


Archive | 2012

Frühe Bindungserfahrungen und Verhaltensauffälligkeiten bei Kleinkindern in einer sozialen und kognitiven Anforderungssituation

Ute Ziegenhain; Bernd Müller; Hellgard Rauh


Archive | 1999

Intervention bei jugendlichen Müttern und ihren Säuglingen

Ute Ziegenhain; R. Dreisörner; B. Derksen


Archive | 1999

Intervention bei jugendlichen Müttern

Ute Ziegenhain; R. Dreisörner; B. Derksen


Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 1994

Prepubertal suicide attempts

Teresa Jacobsen; Michael Huss; Ute Ziegenhain


Archive | 1998

Emotionale Anpassung von Kleinkindern an die Krippenbetreuung

Ute Ziegenhain; Hellgard Rauh; Bernd Müller


Archive | 1994

Nonverbale Kommunikation von Befindlichkeit bei Kleinkindern

Hellgard Rauh; Ute Ziegenhain

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Teresa Jacobsen

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Michael Huss

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Euthymia D. Hibbs

National Institutes of Health

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Markus J.P. Kruesi

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Michael Fendrich

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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