Program - Society for Research on Adolescence
Transcription
Program - Society for Research on Adolescence
Society for Research on Adolescence 14th Biennial Meeting March 8-10, 2012 Complete Program Schedule (Updated March 16, 2012) Vancouver Convention Centre, East Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada Contents Event Numbers (0-000). The first number begins with 1 on Wednesday--the preconference event day--and each session is assigned a sequential number (1-001, 1-002, etc.) for that day. Thursday's event number begins with 2, and each session is assigned a sequential number (2-001, 2-002, etc.) for that day. Friday sessions begin with 3, and Saturday sessions begin with 4. Missing numbers represent sessions that have been cancelled or posters that were withdrawn. Wednesday ........................................................................................................................... 3 Thursday .............................................................................................................................. 8 Friday ................................................................................................................................. 49 Saturday ............................................................................................................................ 85 Author Index .................................................................................................................... 121 2 WEDNESDAY Wednesday, 9:00 am - 12:00 pm articles and papers and 12 books on the subjects of adolescent medicine and the effects of television on children and adolescents, including Adolescent Medicine: A Practical Guide (with R. Brown, Lippincott-Williams & Wilkins, 2nd ed., 2006) and Adolescents and the Media (Sage, 1995), and Children, Adolescents, and the Media (with B. Wilson & A. Jordan, Sage, 2009). Dr. Strasburger received the Adele Delenbaugh Hofmann Award for outstanding lifetime achievement in Adolescent Medicine from the American Academy of Pediatrics in 2000 and was the first recipient of the HolroydSherry Award for media advocacy work. He was awarded the Society for Adolescent Medicine’s Adele Hofmann Visiting Professorship in 2007 and lectured at Sydney Children’s Hospital in Australia. In 2009, he served as the AAP Council on Communication and Media’s first Visiting Professor and did Pediatric Grand Rounds at Duke, UNC, and Wake Forest. (Event 1-001) Invited Workshop East Meeting 12 Wednesday, 9:00 am - 12:00 pm 1-001. Internet Bullying, Facebook Profiles, Kim Kardashian, and Lady Gaga Goes Gaga: How Teenagers Are Affected by New and Old Media Leaders: Victor Strasburger, Ed Donnerstein Abstract. An intensive look at the impact of media on teenagers, including media violence, sex, drugs, obesity, social networking, the Internet. Do the media cause problems or merely reflect the "real world?” The entertainment industry would say that it is merely mirroring what is currently happening in society; the media research tends to disagree. But media research is not easy to do, and we will discuss some of the important aspects of how it is done and its significance. We will use examples from TV, movies, and the Internet to illustrate current areas of concern and will propose a variety of solutions, including the role of clinicians, teachers and schools, the entertainment industry, advertisers, and governments. Biography. Ed Donnerstein’s major research interests are in mass-media violence and mass media policy. He has published over 225 scientific articles in these general areas and serves on the editorial boards of a number of academic journals in both psychology and communication. He was a member of the American Psychological Associations (APA) Commission on Violence and Youth, and the APA Task Force on Television and Society. He served on the Surgeon General’s panel on youth violence as well as on the Advisory Council of the American Medical Association Alliances violence prevention program. He is a Past-President of the International Society for Research on Aggression. In 2008 he received the APA Division 46 Award for Distinguished Scientific Contributions to Media Psychology. Dr. Donnerstein was primary research site director for the National Cable Television Associations 3.5 milliondollar project on TV violence. He served as Dean of the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences at the University of Arizona from 2002-2009. He was also Dean of Social Sciences at the University of California-Santa Barbara as well as the Rupe Chair in the Social Effects of Mass Communication. Dr. Donnerstein, Department of Communication, University of Arizona, has testified at numerous governmental hearings both in the US and abroad regarding the effects and policy implications surrounding mass media violence and pornography, Biography. Victor C. Strasburger is Chief of the Division of Adolescent Medicine, Professor of Pediatrics, and of Family and Community Medicine at the University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque, New Mexico. He graduated from Yale College where he studied fiction writing. He then went to Harvard Medical School and did his pediatric residency at Children’s Hospital in Seattle, Children’s Hospital in Boston, and Paddington Green Children’s Hospital in London. Dr. Strasburger completed an Adolescent Medicine Fellowship at Harvard Medical School. He has served as Chair of the AAP’s Section on Adolescent Health, a member of the Committee on Communications, and a consultant to the National PTA and the AMA on children and the media. He has been featured on National Public Radio (NPR) and in Newsweek, the NY Times, and USA Today and has appeared on “Oprah,” “The Today Show,” and “CBS This Morning.” Dr. Strasburger has lectured widely and is the author of more than 150 3 for collecting data. These designs are sorely underutilized in research across the social sciences despite the tremendous benefits of using them. I’ll then address some general techniques related to modeling when missing data are estimated using multiple imputation vs. full information maximum likelihood estimation. including testimony before the US Senate on TV violence. He has served as a member of the US Surgeon General’s Panel on Pornography and the National Academy of Sciences Subpanel on Child Pornography and Child Abuse. He has had numerous invited presentations dealing with the issues of mass media violence and policy. Biography. Todd D. Little, Ph.D. is a Professor of Psychology, Director of the Quantitative training program, Director of the undergraduate Social and Behavioral Sciences Methodology minor, and a member of the Developmental training program. Since 2010 he is the Director of the Center for Research Methods and Data Analysis (CRMDA) at University of Kansas. Dr. Little is internationally recognized for his quantitative work on various aspects of applied SEM (e.g., indicator selection, parceling, modeling developmental processes) as well as his substantive developmental research (e.g., action-control processes and motivation, coping, and self-regulation). In 2001, he was elected to membership in the Society for Multivariate Experimental Psychology. In 2009, he was elected President of APA’s Division 5 (Evaluation, Measurement, and Statistics) and in 2010 was elected Fellow of the division. Prof. Little founded, organizes, and teaches in the internationally renowned KU ‘Stats Camps’ each June (see crmda.KU.edu for details of the summer training programs). He has edited five books related to methodology including the Oxford Handbook of Quantitative Methods and the Guildford Handbook of Developmental Research Methods (with Brett Laursen and Noel Card). Dr. Little has been principal investigator or co-principal investigator on over 15 grants and contracts, and he has guided the development of over 10 different measurement tools. Wednesday, 11:30 am - 7:00 pm (Event 1-001.5) Preconference Marriott Vancouver Pinnacle Downtown Hotel Wednesday, 11:30 am - 7:00 pm 1-001.5. Peer Relations Preconference Contacts: Christina Salmivalli, Rene Veenstra Abstract. In this year’s peer relations preconference, we provide you a buffet of different research frameworks, designs, and methods that will help you to plan and realize your study, analyze your data, and interpret your findings. The four keynote speakers will provide insights into genetics, experimental studies, physiological measurements, and intervention research, and how each of these areas have contributed and could potentially contribute to understanding adolescents’ peer relations. During parallel teaching sessions, you will have the opportunity to learn about recent advances in the developmental research methods. Last but not least, you can foster your own peer relations and become a member of new networks! Organizers: Christina Salmivalli (University of Turku, Finland) and René Veenstra (University of Groningen, the Netherlands). Wednesday, 1:30 pm - 4:30 pm (Event 1-002) Invited Workshop East Meeting 12 Wednesday, 1:30 pm - 4:30 pm 1-002. On the Merits of Planning and Planning for Missing Data* (Event 1-003) Invited Workshop East Meeting 13 Wednesday, 1:30 pm - 4:30 pm *You're a fool for not using planned missing data design. 1-003. Culture and Positive Development Leader: Todd Little Leader: Nancy Guerra Abstract. In this workshop, I will cover the general issues related to unplanned missing data and how best to prepare (plan for) missing data (as they will inevitably occur). I will then turn the attention to details of how to use planned missing data designs Abstract. This workshop focuses on the impact of context on youth development, with a specific focus on culture as a developmental context. First, the issue of “core competencies” as markers of developmental adjustment will be discussed, 4 including whether we can identify a set of common competencies that are important for positive development across cultures. Potential indicators include positive sense of self, self-regulation, decision-making skills, moral system of belief, and prosocial connectedness (Guerra & Bradshaw, 2008). Recent findings with at-risk (male and female) youth in Jamaica will be presented as an example of crosscultural relevance of these competencies. A second focus of this workshop is on how culture impacts assessment and intervention to promote positive youth development, including consideration of surface structure (e.g., language) and deep structure (e.g., cultural norms) impact on what we study and how we study it. As an example of assessment challenges, pilot data from a new World Bank study of social-emotional competencies and labor market outcomes in China, Sri Lanka, and Bolivia will be reviewed. Finally, issues of culture and intervention outcomes will be highlighted with findings from a replication of an evidence-based practice, Families and Schools Together, with immigrant Latino families in Southern California and a subsequent follow-up study of a newly-developed program, Child Development Parent Training, targeting unique needs of these children and families. (CDPT), a home visitation program for parents of children and teenagers. She has co-edited several related recent books including Preventing Youth Violence in a Multicultural Society (APA Books, 2005), Treating the Juvenile Offender (Guilford Press, 2008), and Core Competencies to Prevent Problem Behaviors and Promote Positive Youth Development (Jossey-Bass, 2008). She also has served on numerous study groups, panels, and advisory committees including the President’s Council on Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention. Her efforts have involved projects in the U.S. and internationally, including work in Jamaica, Trinidad, Mexico, Colombia, Argentina, Peru, and Chile. Biography. Nancy G. Guerra is a Professor of Clinical/Developmental Psychology at the University of Delaware, and Associate Dean of Research in the College of Arts and Sciences. Prior to this, she was a Professor of Psychology at the University of California at Riverside and Director of the Academic Center of Excellence on Youth Violence Prevention funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2000-2011). She is an outgoing Associate Editor of the journal, Child Development, and current editor of Journal of Research on Adolescence. Her work emphasizes translational research focused on understanding and preventing youth aggression and violence, at-risk, vulnerable, and marginalized youth, and integrating positive development and core competencies with prevention of risk behaviors. She has published numerous research articles examining predictors of aggression and has developed and evaluated several preventive interventions. These interventions include the Metropolitan Area Child Study multicomponent, school-based program, Viewpoints cognitivebehavioral program for juvenile offenders, Positive Life Changes (PLC) for at-risk youth based on core competencies for risk prevention and positive youth development, and Child Development Parent Training Abstract. Cultural neuroscience is a research field that examines how cultural values, practices and beliefs affect neurobiological processes underlying a range of psychological mechanisms and behavior across multiple time scales. Recent advances in cultural science demonstrate a tremendous gap in our knowledge about where culture arises from and how culture is transmitted and persists. Additionally, advances in neuroscience show the importance of understanding how the mind and brain mutually constitute each other and what kinds of psychological capacities and behaviors are malleable, and to what extent, as a function of dynamic interaction with the environment. In this workshop, Dr. Chiao will discuss the aforementioned issues, and describe some recent advances in the field examining how culture affects neurobiological processes across development. Dr. Pfeifer will address why it is important to consider how culturally-constructed i) definitions of adolescence and ii) dominant neuroscience approaches to adolescence may constrain our ability to truly understand the neural foundations of adolescent development within and across cultures. She will argue that perhaps adolescence should be investigated as a period of high cultural plasticity, especially in the social domain, enabled by rapid brain development and the social reorientation fueled by puberty. Dr. Pfeifer will also present an example derived from her work on the neurodevelopment of self-appraisal and mentalizing processes, from a series of fMRI studies conducted in the USA and China. (Event 1-004) Invited Workshop East Meeting 14 Wednesday, 1:30 pm - 4:30 pm 1-004. Why Culture Is Critical to the Social, Cognitive, and Affective Neuroscience of Adolescence Leaders: Joan Chiao, Jennifer Pfeifer 5 interplay between networks that react to emotions and those which regulate them, especially as influenced by pubertal development, and (iv) characterizing how social experiences (such as inclusion and rejection) influence decision-making and risky behavior at the neural and behavioral levels. Biography. Joan Chiao is an Assistant Professor of Psychology at Northwestern University is an affiliated faculty member of the Neuroscience Institute (NUIN) the Cognitive Science Program and Asian-American Studies Program. Dr. Chiao received her doctoral degree from Harvard University in 2006, and her undergraduate work at Stanford University graduating in 2000 with a B.S. in Symbolic Systems. Dr. Chiao's research interests include social affective and cultural neuroscience as well as integrating psychology and neuroscience research with public policy and population health issues. She currently serves on the Editorial Board of six peer-reviewed journals and has received grant support from the National Science Foundation, National Institute for Health and Japan Society for the Promotion of Science. She is the Co-Founder and Co-Director of the International Cultural Neuroscience Consortium (ICNC) an organization dedicated to building an interdisciplinary, international research network in cultural neuroscience to address pressing questions in population health disparities and public policy in a global context. Wednesday, 1:30 pm - 5:30 pm (Event 1-005) Preconference East Meeting 9 Wednesday, 1:30 pm - 5:30 pm 1-005. Romantic Relationships Preconference Contact: Manfred H. M. van Dulmen Abstract. This event aims to bring together researchers interested in adolescent romantic relationships. Similar to previous romantic relationship preconference meetings, we will have a diverse program including junior scholar perspectives on future directions, speed-dating with senior scholars, and break-out sessions on innovative methods. The scientific portion of the program will be followed by a social get-together. Biography. Jennifer Pfeifer is an Assistant Professor in Developmental Psychology at the University of Oregon, and PI of the Developmental Social Neuroscience Lab. She received her Ph.D. from UCLA in 2007 and B.A. from Stanford University in 2000. Dr. Pfeifer is on the editorial board of the new Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience journal, and has received funding and grant support from NIMH and the Oregon Medical Research Foundation. Her research addresses several broad topics in social cognitive and affective development from middle childhood to late adolescence: (1) examining developmental changes in the neural bases of selfevaluation processes, including direct and reflected self-appraisals, self-conscious emotions, and crosscultural differences in self-construals, (2) understanding the development of neural systems that support advanced perspective-taking and social comparison abilities, as well as the more basic mentalizing mechanisms that facilitate our understanding of other individuals' inner states (including via shared neural representations of our own and others' emotions), (3) exploring the (Wednesday, continuedon next page) 6 Wednesday, 5:30 pm - 8:30 pm Wednesday, 6:00 pm - 7:00 pm (Event 1-006) Preconference East Meeting 11 Wednesday, 5:30 pm - 8:30 pm (Event 1-007) Emerging Scholar Session Lobby, Marriott Vancouver Pinnacle Downtown Wednesday, 6:00 pm - 7:00 pm 1-006. Preconference Meeting of the Society for Research on Identity Formation (SRIF) 1-007. Emerging Scholars Welcome and Social Event Emerging Scholar Representatives: Laura WrayLake, Carolyn Spellings Contact: Janet Gebelt Start the Biennial Meeting off right by joining the Emerging Scholars of SRA for a social event! This is an informal opportunity to learn about what events and resources are available to you during the Biennial Meeting. It also provides you with an opportunity to meet other students and new professionals. Meet Laura Wray-Lake and Carolyn Spellings in the lobby of the Marriott Vancouver Pinnacle Downtown between 6:00pm and 7:00pm and transition to an off-site location for a casual, social evening. Abstract. The Society for Research on Identity Formation (SRIF) will meet to exchange theoretical and research ideas on the role of identity in psychosocial development. The session will begin with a roundtable exchange describing the current activities of individuals attending the session. This will be followed by brief reports by SRIF officers on organizational acitivites, including planning for the 2013 SRIF Conference. The session will conclude with poster presentations. The session is open to anyone interested in identity. A fee of $10 for students and $20 for professionals will be collected. For further information about SRIF and this preconference meeting, please email us at srif@fiu.edu or contact either of the individuals listed below: Andrew White, SRIF Program Chair whiteas@kenyon.edu Janet Gebelt, SRIF Secretary jgebelt@westfield.ma.edu 7 THURSDAY Thursday, 8:30 am - 10:00 am strengthen UNICEF’s work; we welcome this opportunity to invite the broader academic community to work with us towards a new vision for adolescents. (Event 2-001) Invited Keynote Address East Ballroom Salon B Thursday, 8:30 am - 10:00 am Biography: Judith Diers is Chief, Adolescent Development and Participation, UNICEF. Prior to taking up this position in July 2011, she spent twelve years as a researcher at the Population Council, culminating as an Associate in the Poverty, Gender and Youth program, where she coordinated a global portfolio of research on Transitions to Adulthood with a particular focus on adolescent girls. As a member of the Population Council Institutional Review Board (IRB), Dr. Diers drew upon her expertise in research ethics to ensure a focus on research methodologies and protocols that protect the rights of adolescents, including their right to be heard. She has worked extensively throughout Africa and Asia, beginning with four years in Namibia following that country’s independence, where she provided strategic direction in the building of the country’s first university, helped to found the country’s WorldTeach volunteer program, and advised the Namibia Red Cross on the gender aspects of its water scheme. Her research at the Population Council resulted in numerous collaborations with NGOs, Governments, and UN agencies, both at the country and global levels. She has a master’s degree from Union Theological Seminary in theology and ethics and an M.A. and Ph.D. from Princeton University in public policy and demography. 2-001. Adolescents at UNICEF: Hidden But Emerging Chair: Niobe Way, Department of Applied Psychology, New York University Speaker: Judith Diers, Chief, Adolescent Development and Participation (ADAP), UNICEF Abstract: UNICEF is the custodian for the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which defines children as “every human being under the age of 18,” and outlines children’s rights to survival, development, protection and participation. For the first 50 years since UNICEF’s inception, much of our focus was on youngest children and their survival and has resulted in great reductions in under-5 mortality through our work in over 160 countries in health, nutrition, water and sanitation, education, and child protection. However, in the past decade, there has been increasing recognition of the need to work for and with adolescents to ensure the fulfillment of the CRC’s promise. Adolescents are profoundly affected by today’s emerging challenges: Economic crises, poverty, displacement, unemployment, coupled with cutbacks in public education, health care, and social protection. At the country level our colleagues, partners, and adolescents themselves have led the charge, developing innovative programs to address these issues. At the global level, UNICEF is now ready to advance the adolescent agenda with increased investment in programs, policy, and participation. But questions remain—how to integrate adolescents into sectoral and multisectoral programs and secure their position in national youth and social policies. Moreover, sufficient investment in the physical, cognitive, social, and emotional development of adolescents will require an even stronger and more determined collaboration across disciplines, professions, and agencies. The evidence base being built by members of the Society for Research on Adolescence will (Event 2-002) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 15 Thursday, 8:30 am - 10:00 am 2-002. Understanding the Relationship Between Peer Victimization and Mental and Physical Health Problems 8 Chair: Jennifer M. Knack Effects of Peer Victimization on Cortisol Reactivity and Physical Health Reports Differ by Sex Jennifer Knack, Lauri Jensen-Campbell Does Being Bullied Influence Health and Biological Functioning Over Time? Lauri Jensen-Campbell, Priya Iyer Are Some Bullied Adolescents More Susceptible To Depression? Influence of the Genetic Polymorphsism 5HTTLPR on The Victimization-Depression Link Priya Iyer, Lauri Jensen-Campbell Longitudinal effects of peer victimization on depression in early adolescence Amanda Krygsman, Heather Brittain, Christine Blain-Arcaro, Steven Arnocky, Eric Duku, Patricia McDougall, Tracy Vaillancourt (Event 2-004) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 18 Thursday, 8:30 am - 10:00 am 2-004. Parent Contributions to Adolescent Responses to Stress Chair: Martha Wadsworth Prospective Contributions of ParentAdolescent Relationship Quality and Socialization of Coping to Early Adolescents’ Reponses to Stress Jamie Abaied, Karen Rudolph The Relations of Multiple Socialization Modalities to Adolescent Adaptive Coping in the Face of Poverty-Related Stress. Hannah Bianco, Martha Wadsworth Observed Parenting and Child Coping: Cross-Sectional and Prospective Relations in Families with a History of Parental Depression Kelly Watson, Jennifer Thigpen, Jennifer Potts, Rex Forehand, Bruce Compas (Event 2-003) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 17 Thursday, 8:30 am - 10:00 am 2-003. Epidemiology Meets Etiology: Integrating Diverse Datasets to Gain New Insights Into Adolescent Substance Use and Psychopathology Thursday, 10:00 am - 11:30 am Chair: Julie Maslowsky Discussant: Pamela Davis-Kean Combining Mother and Father Reports of Children’s Negative Affect Using Integrative Data Analysis Andrea Howard, Daniel Bauer, Ruth Baldasaro, Patrick Curran, Andrea Hussong Improved Mental Health Mediates Parent Support's Protective Effect on Black Adolescents' Alcohol Use: An Integrative Analysis Julie Maslowsky, John Schulenberg, Lisa Chiodo, John Hannigan, Mark Greenwald, James Janisse, Robert Sokol, Virginia Delaney-Black Does Marijuana Use Lead to College Dropout? Longitudinal Epidemiological and Daily-Level Insights Jennifer Maggs, Jeremy Staff, Deborah Kloska, Megan Patrick, Patrick O'Malley, John Schulenberg (Event 2-005) Poster Session 1 Exhibit Hall B Thursday, 10:00 am - 11:30 am 9 1 Vagal Tone During Parent and Child Interaction as a Protective Factor for Future Adolescent Depression Emily Patton 2 Childhood Abuse and Menarche: Findings from an Ethnically-Diverse Sample of Young Women Julianna Deardorff, Maria-Elena Young, Katherine Stearns 3 The Moral Faculty in Adolescents: Investigating Age Differences in the Application and Justification of Three Principles of Harm Paul Stey, Daniel Lapsley, Mary McKeever 4 The Role of the Past: Time Frequency and Time Attitudes in Adolescents Laura Finan, Zena Mello, Frank Worrell 5 An Exploration of the Changes Associated with Pregnancy and the Meaning of Parenthood Among Hispanic Adolescents Ani Yazedjian, Michelle Toews 15 Exposure to Violence Moderates Family and Peer Influences on Adolescent Antisocial Behavior Kristen Jacobson, Pan Chen 6 Using Sexual Communication Intentions to Distinguish Parents Who Have Not Discussed Sexual Health With Their Young Adolescents Heather Sears, E. Sandra Byers 16 Coping with Racism: Mediators and Moderators of the Discrimination—Distress Link among Mexican-Origin Adolescents Irene Park, Crystalia Sulaiman, May Kim 7 Mutual Influences Between Coparenting and Adolescent Adjustment Elizabeth Riina, Susan McHale 17 School Engagement and Academic Performance: The Mediating Role of Intrinsic Motivation Stephanie Wormington, Jennifer Corpus 8 A Model of Positive Family and Peer Socialization Processes in Adolescence Lela Williams, Elizabeth Anthony, Nicole Nicotera 18 Activity Engagement as a Predictor of Adolescent Successful Development Heather Lawford, Michael Busseri, Linda Rose-Krasnor 9 The Developmental Trajectory of African Americans’ Family Conflict in High School: Effects on Adaptive Functioning in Adulthood Daniel Choe, Marc Zimmerman 19 Effects of Academic Peer-reputation on Academic-outcomes Madhavi Menon 20 Voice, Gender and Gender Stereotypy in Classroom Interactions Patricia Waters 10 All in a Day’s Work: Maternal Employment and Adolescent Aggression Phoua Yang, Mary Saczawa, Julia Graber, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn 21 Socially-Derived Goals as Predictors of Young Adolescents’ Social and Academic Goal Pursuit Sandra Baker, Shannon Russell, Kathryn Wentzel 11 Two Parents are Not Always Better Than One: The Case of Fathers With Externalizing Problems Margo Gardner, Anne Martin, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn 22 Dispositional Hope as a Moderator of the Link Between Social Comparison with Friends and Eighth Grade Students’ Perceptions of Academic Competence Joanna Bissell-Havran 12 Parenting Among Grandparent Caregivers and Teens: Role of Parents and Impact on Grandparent/Grandchild Relationship Quality Kimberly Kopko, Rachel Dunifon 23 Predicting Science Career Commitment: A Mediational Relationship Between Science Support Experiences, Self-Efficacy, and Identity Rachael Robnett, Martin Chemers, Eileen Zurbriggen, Barbara Goza, Sergio Queirolo 13 Immigrant Chinese Mothers, Fathers, and Youth: The Roles of Family Relationships and Cultural Values on Youth's Happiness and Self-Esteem Fanli Jia, Susan Chuang, Adrian Pasquarella, Alexandra Gottardo 24 Latino/a Youth Apprenticeship of Civic Engagement: A Case Study of High School Learning Environments Fe Moncloa 14 I Say You Say: Sibling Disclosure and Associations with Relationship Quality and Adjustment Kelly Bassett Greer, Nicole Campione-Barr 25 Required Community Service: What Features Affect Civic Attitude Change? Parissa Jahromi, Christy Buchanan 26 Youth Gangs: Scare Tactics That Work Brooke Knowlton 10 27 Parental Acculturation Gaps and Coparenting Among Immigrant Chinese Canadian Families with Adolescents Lauren Chance, Catherine Costigan, Bonnie Leadbeater Cheryl Somers, Joshua Tynan, Jina Yoon, Barry Markman 38 Peer Pressure, Attitudes, and Behavior: A Meta-analysis of Three Types of Peer Influence on Adolescent Sexual Behavior Outcomes Daphne van de Bongardt, Ellen Reitz, Maja Dekovic 28 Locus of control and peer relationships among Caucasian, Hispanic, and Asian Adolescents Hannah Kang, Chuansheng Chen, Ellen Greenberger 39 Young adult smoking in peer groups: An experimental study Zeena Harakeh, Rutger Engels, Rick Van Baaren, Wilma Vollebergh 29 The Relation Between Discrimination and Depression among Filipino American Youth: the Moderating Role of Ethnic Community Tzufen Chang 40 Working Memory Ability Predicts Trajectories of Early Drug Use: The Mediational Role of Impulsivity Atika Khurana, Laura Betancourt, Nancy Brodsky, Wei Yang, Daniel Romer, Hallam Hurt 30 Does gender prejudice of the parents influence prejudice in their offspring? A study with family tetrads Sara Alfieri, Elena Marta 31 A Dual Systems Model of ADHD: Reinforcement Sensitivity Theory and Executive Functioning Hector Lopez-Vergara, Craig Colder, Larry Hawk 41 School Bullying: Risks and Protective Factors Maya Peled, Annie Smith, Colleen Poon 42 Prevalence and Impacts of Bullying Worldwide Lyndall Schumann, Lindsay Reynolds, Wendy Craig 32 Protective and Risk-Related School Factors Affecting Alcohol Consumption: A Developmental Perspective Stephanie Wormington, Kristen Anderson, Sandra Brown 43 Disclosure of Peer Victimization Experiences: Who Do Adolescents Tell? Annette La Greca, Whitney Herge, Lisa Bailey 33 Characteristics of Best and Worst Drinking Experiences Among College Students and Impact on Drinking Decisions Tracy Herring, Christine Lee, Barbara Leigh 44 Peer Victimization Profiles Among Adolescents Whitney Herge, Annette La Greca, Sherilynn Chan, Betty Lai 34 Latina Preadolescents' Body Shape Preference and Perceived Messages from Mothers and Friends Rebeca Mireles-Rios, Laura Romo 46 Dating, Parent-Adolescent Conflict, and Depressive Symptomatology in MexicanOrigin Adolescent Females: Examining the connections Fabiola Alvarado-Koperberg, Mayra Bamaca-Colbert, Jochebed Gayles, Emile Tilghman-Osborne 35 A Qualitative Analysis of the Perceptions of the Causes of Eating Disorders According to Individuals with Eating Disorders Elizabeth Blodgett Salafia, Mallary Schaefer 47 Friendship Quality, Self-Disclosure to the Best Friend and Well-Being in Italian Lesbian and Gay Adolescents Roberto Baiocco, Fiorenzo Laghi, Cecilia Pace, Ilena Di Pomponio, Giulio Zavattini 36 Measuring Risk and Resilience Among Early Adolescents Living in Poverty Elizabeth Anthony, Kristine Hickle 37 Goal Oriented and Risk Taking Behavior: The Roles of Multiple Systems for Caucasian and Arab-American Adolescents 48 Preferential Attention to Emotional Stimuli Predicts Adolescents’ Susceptibility to Peer Influence: A Pilot Investigation 11 Katharine Buck, Natalie Kretsch, Yarden Ran, Kierstin Thornhill, Kathryn Harden 59 Profiles of Suicide Behaviour Among Adolescents Admitted to an Inpatient Psychiatric Unit Cintia Quiroga, Christine Aucoin, Stephanie Greenham, John Lyons 49 Contemporary Bulgarian and Macedonian Emerging Adults: Generation Growing Up in the Period of Social Changes Zornitza Ganeva, Andromahi Naumovska Naumovska, Dimitar Bonevski 60 Investigating the Potential Relationship between Substance Use Age of Onset and Depression and Anxiety in Emerging Adulthood Megan Shaine, Richard Lanthier 50 Aggressive and Playful Relational Behaviors: How Wrong are They and Why? Kayley Bloss, Alec Stinnett, Ericka Newcomb, Amy Luckner 61 Relationships Between Suicidal Ideation and Depressive Symptoms and Substance Use: Results from the Raising Healthy Children Project Jenna Elgin, Charles Fleming, James Mazza, Robert Abbott, Richard Catalano 51 Other-Sex Friendships, Parental Monitoring, and Substance Use Over Eight Years: Testing a Mediation Model for Boys and Girls Anne-Sophie Denault, Francois Poulin 62 A Panel Study of Prevalence and Risk Factor of PTSD Among Adolescents After the 2008 Wenchuan Earthquake Fang Fan, Yuhong Zheng, Shan Cheng, Yanyun Qin, Shixiu Sun, Lu Zhang 52 What Type of Friend Reduces the Risk of Peer Victimization in Socially Withdrawn Versus Aggressive Early Adolescents? Caroline Doramajian, Megan Wood, Jonathan Santo, Felicia Meyer, William Bukowski 63 A Moderated Mediation Model in the Relationship Between Materialism and Wellbeing in Late Adolescents Chengfu Yu, Wei Zhang, Shujun Wang, Jieting Zhang, Hao Li 53 Emerging Adults' Perceptions of Diversity and Multicultural Attitudes Andrew Bower, Christian Scales, Teri Tanaka, Mixue Xie, Adrienne Nishina 65 Planned Missing Data Designs for Longitudinal Research Mijke Rhemtulla, Todd Little, E. Whitney Moore, Kimberly Gibson, Wei Wu 54 Psychometric Properties of Prosocial Tendency Measure in Three Different Cultures María Richaud, Gustavo Carlo, Belén Mesurado, George Knight 66 Efficacy of a School-Based Motivational Enhancement Intervention for Adolescent Substance Abusers David Stewart, Kelly Serafini, Christopher Arger, Jenell Effinger, Ben Felleman, Leandra Shipley, Dylan Athenour 55 Family Predictors of Mexican-Origin Adolescents’ Romantic Relationship Quality Fanita Tyrell, Lorey Wheeler, Nancy Gonzales, Larry Dumka 56 Longitudinal Impact of Sexual Victimization on Romantic Experiences Charlene Collibee, Wyndol Furman 67 Effect of Joint Parent-adolescent Communication about Sexuality Education Program on Parents and their Adolescents Kunlakarn Apiwattanalunggarn, Boonserm Hutabaedya, Prakairat Patrathiti 57 Predicting Adolescent Loneliness and Social Anxiety: Examining Multiple Support Domains Alyson Cavanaugh, Cheryl Buehler, Jinni Su 68 Proactive and Reaction Functions of Relational Aggression and Internalizing Symptoms: Peer Mechanisms of Influence Nicole Lafko, Dianna Murray-Close 58 “She Would act Like a Queen at Ressice and Think she Would Rule the Fort”: Cultural Voice and Early Identity Development Alice Davidson, Marsha Walton, Regan Humphrey, Caitlin Campbell 12 69 Investigation in the relationships between proactive-reactive aggressiveness and psycho-social maladjustment in Japan Yoshikazu Hamaguchi, Masayasu Ishikawa, Megumi Eguchi, Yasuyo Honda, Takeshi Fujiwara, Mariko Obana, Chiaki Kuwabara, Yuichi Sekiguchi 79 Fifth Graders’ Psychosocial Adaptation as a Function of Gender Typicality Karen Kochel, Cindy Miller, Kimberly Updegraff, Richard Fabes, Carol Martin, Laura Hanish 80 I Cut Therefore I am: Non-Suicidal SelfInjury and Adolescent Identity Development Andrea Breen, Stephen Lewis, Olga Sutherland 70 Earned Security from Adolescence to Early Adulthood Lee Raby, W Andrew Collins 71 Adolescent Characteristics and Peer Influence as Predictors of Antisocial Behavior Benjamin Goodlett, Christopher Trentacosta, Daniel Shaw, Luke Hyde 81 The Effects of Racial Identity on AfricanAmerican Adolescent Well-Being: A Clarification of the Research and Metaanalysis Corinn Elmore, Noni Gaylord-Harden, Jelani Mandara 72 The Emotional Lives of Early Adolescents: Best Friend Emotion Socialization, Friendship Quality and Emotion Regulation Melissa Simard, Megan Wood, Marie-Eve Dubois, William Bukowski 82 Parental Influences on Ethnic Identity Development among Immigrant Background Adolescents Nathaly Pacheco-Santivanez, Ariana Ayvar, Claudia Castaneda, Ravreet Cheema, Janet Oh 73 I know how you feel: distinct forms of empathy and emotion recognition accuracy in a late adolescent sample Rachael Lax, Mandi Burnette 83 Sexual Identity and Well-Being: Person Centered Analyses of Sexual Health Jenifer McGuire, Erin Chapman, Marsha Turnbull, Paula Adams, Jennifer Whitney 74 Personality and Loneliness in Late Adolescence Eveline Teppers, Theo Klimstra, Luc Goossens 84 Prosocial Personality and Aggression Predicting Perceived Movie Violence Deanna Opal, Arielle Deutsch, Gustavo Carlo 75 Contextual Differences in How High School Seniors Accept Responsibility for Their Education Theresa Thorkildsen, Nicole Reed, Shakari Laws, Ashley Bailey, Kuan Xing, Persis Driver, Amanda Herte (Event 2-006) Government and Foundation Posters Exhibit Hall B 76 Predictors of Psychopathology in waraffected Ugandan youth Kathryn Hecht, Peter Ralston, Nicki Crick, Dante Cicchetti 2-006. Funding Opportunities With US Government Agencies and Foundations Posters remain on display: Thursday, 10:00 am – Saturday, 5:00 pm. Session on Friday, 12:15 pm – 1:45 pm to meet with agency and foundation representatives at their posters. 77 Developmental Differences in Subliminal Priming with Goal Pursuit Feedback: An fMRI analysis Allison Detloff, Christine Rivera, Dana Rosen, David Smith, Timothy Strauman G1 Funding Opportunities at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Sarah Bacon 78 An Empirical Examination of Spirituality as an Internal Developmental Asset During Adolescence Anthony James, Mark Fine, Linda Turner 13 G2 Competitive Grant Programs available through the National Institute of Food and Agriculture Suzanne Le Menestrel G3 Interagency Working Group on Youth Programs: Working Together to Improve Youth Outcomes Sarah Oberlander G4 Adolescent Developmental and Translational Research at the National Institute of Mental Health Julia Zehr, LeShawndra Price G5 Funding Opportunities at the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Valerie Maholmes Fostering Marginalized Youths’ Political Participation: Longitudinal Roles of Parental Political Socialization and Sociopolitical Development Matthew Diemer Racial/ethnic and Gender Differences in the Relationship Between Classroom Climate and Civic Attitudes Among US Adolescents Erin Godfrey The Effect of School-Based Practices upon the Social Responsibility Attitudes of Urban Teens Scott Seider, Sarah Novick, Jessica Gomez (Event 2-008) Roundtable East Meeting 1 Thursday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am G6 Research on Adolescent Development at the National Institute on Drug Abuse Cheryl Boyce, Aria Davis Crump, Kathy Etz 2-008. Ethical Considerations in Engaging Vulnerable Populations in Self-Harm Research G7 Alcohol Abuse and Adolescent Brain Development: Research Funding Opportunities at the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism Mariela Shirley Moderator: Janis Whitlock Panelists: Mitchell Prinstein, Graham Martin, Matthew Aldridge, David Klonksy G8 Jacobs Foundation - Research and Innovation for Children and Youth Simon Sommer, Gelgia Fetz (Event 2-009) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 10 Thursday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am G9 Spencer Foundation Funding Opportunities Susan Dauber 2-009. Longitudinal Associations Between Stress and Self-Regulation During Adolescence G10 William T. Grant Funding Interests and Grant Programs Kimberly DuMont Chair: Elizabeth Cauffman Discussant: Elizabeth Cauffman Stress Exposure Disrupts Emotion Regulation During Adolescence Resulting in Increased Risk of Internalizing Psychopathology Katie McLaughlin, Mark Hatzenbuehler Stressful Life Events Shape the Development of Self-Regulation During Adolescence Kevin King, Carolyn McCarty, Ann Vander Stoep, Elizabeth McCauley, John Baer Exposure to Violence Disrupts Adolescent Development of Psychosocial Maturity Kathryn Monahan, Kevin King, Elizabeth Cauffman, Laurie Chassin Thursday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am (Event 2-007) Paper Discussion Symposium East Ballroom Salon B Thursday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 2-007. Families, Classrooms and Schools: Exploring the Proximal Contexts of Civic Development Among Diverse Youth Chair: Erin Godfrey Discussant: Connie Flanagan 14 (Event 2-010) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 11 Thursday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am (Event 2-012) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 13 Thursday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 2-010. Identity and Education: How Adolescent Racial Identity Interacts With Context to Influence Achievement and Motivational Outcomes 2-012. Bidirectional Influences of Family Relationships and the Development of Stress and Sex Hormones in Adolescence Chair: Amber D. Williams Racial Identity and Academic Achievement: The Influence of School Racial Composition Bridget Richardson, Robert Sellers How School Racial Climate Moderates the Relationship of Racial Identity to Academic Satisfaction Christy Byrd, Tabbye Chavous The Role of Gender in the Relations Among Racial Socialization, Racial Identity, and Academic Outcomes Amber Williams, Robert Sellers The Dual Role of Social Class and Racial Identity in Predicting African American Adolescents’ Academic Beliefs and Outcomes Felecia Web, Tabbye Chavous Chair: Kristine Marceau Paradoxical Links Between Stress and Sex Hormones in Adolescents Elizabeth Shirtcliff, Jamie Hanson, Karen Rudolph, Paula Ruttle, Seth Pollak Covariation of Cortisol, DHEA, and Testosterone Across Early Adolescence and the Impact of Early Life Stress Paula Ruttle, Elizabeth Shirtcliff, Jeffrey Armstrong, Marilyn Essex Stress and Sex Hormone Reactivity Predict Family Problems in Early Adolescence Kristine Marceau, Lorah Dorn, Elizabeth Susman Observed Family Conflict Moderates the Association between Pubertal Timing and Adolescent Depressive Symptoms Nicholas Allen, Janet Tong, Sarah Whittle, Julian Simmons, Orli Schwartz, Michelle Byrne, Lisa Sheeber (Event 2-011) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 12 Thursday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 2-011. Beyond Family Structure: The Influence of Parental Relationship Instability on Adolescent Well-Being Chair: Jennifer L. Carrano Family Instability, Early Pubertal Timing, and Adolescent Romance Shannon Cavanagh Family Instability and Educational Attainment Paula Fomby Lifetime Family Structure Patterns and Adolescent Psychosocial Functioning Rebekah Levine Coley, Jennifer Carrano, Heather Bachman 15 (Event 2-013) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 14 Thursday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 2-013. Youth-driven programs: Involving adolescents in leadership and governance in youth programs Attending to Bullying: A Psychophysical Approach to Understanding Peer Aggression and Victimization Wendy Craig, Chelsea Heaven, Catherine Jee, Monica Castelhano (Event 2-015) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 17 Thursday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am Chair: Tom Akiva Discussant: Ben Kirshner Involving youth in running youth programs: How common and what does it do for youth? Tom Akiva The Role of Advisors’ Assistance in YouthLed Programs: As Seen by Youth Reed Larson, LaTesha Washington, Aisha Griffith The Creation of Youth-Driven Spaces Through Organizational Intervention: Benefits Reported by Youth Laurie Van Egeren, Jamie Heng-Chieh Wu, Meenal Rana, Mariah Kornbluh, Amber Duddy, John Weiss 2-015. American Indian and Canadian First Nations Adolescents: Substance Use, Mental Health and Culturally Informed Prevention Chair: Nancy R. Whitesell Substance Use Among Young American Indian Adolescents: Relationship of Stress to Early Initiation Nancy Whitesell, Carol Kaufman, Cecelia Big Crow, Christina Mitchell Mental and Substance Use Disorders from Early Adolescence to Young Adulthood: An Eight Year Panel Study of Indigenous Adolescents. Les Whitbeck, Melissa Walls A View from Within: First Nation Adolescents’ Descriptions of Racial, Ethnic, Cultural Identity Barbara Gfellner (Event 2-014) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 15 Thursday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 2-014. Attentional Processes in Adolescent Peer Status and Aggression: New Evidence from EyeTracking Studies Chair: Antonius H. Cillessen Take a Look at Me Now: The Effect of Popularity on Automatic Attention in Early Adolescence Tessa Lansu, Antonius Cillessen, Johan Karremans Attention to Dynamic Scenes of Ambiguous Provocation and Aggression in Youth: It’s Not Just What They Look at, It’s When Wendy Troop-Gordon, Laura Vogel-Ciernia, Robert Gordon, Elisabeth Ewing Lee, Kari Visconti Eye-tracking Assessment of SocialPerception Biases in Boys with Behavior Disorders Bram Orobio de Castro, Tako Horsley, Menno van der Schoot 16 (Event 2-016) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 18 Thursday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 2-016. Adolescent anxiety symptoms: Developmental trajectories and relationship to adolescent identity and personality Chair: William W. Hale Developmental Trajectories and Heterogeneity in Developmental Trajectories of Adolescent Anxiety Disorder Symptoms in an 8-year Longitudinal Community Study Stefanie Nelemans, William Hale, Susan Branje, Quinten Raaijmakers, Tom Frijns, Pol van Lier, Wim Meeus Social Anxiety Trajectories during Adolescence and Relations with Cognition, Social Competence and Temperament Factors Anne Miers, Anke Blöte, Mark de Rooij, Caroline Bokhorst, Michiel Westenberg Is the Generalized Anxiety Disorder Symptom of Worry Just Another Form of Neuroticism?: A Five-Year Longitudinal Study of Adolescents from the General Population William Hale, Theo Klimstra, Wim Meeus Characterizing the Self-System over Time in Adolescence: Internal Structure and Associations with Internalizing Symptoms Seth Schwartz, Theo Klimstra, Koen Luyckx, William Hale, Wim Meeus Reproductive Risk and Wellbeing in the Adolescent Children of Adolescent Mothers Natacha De Genna, Cynthia Larkby, Marie Cornelius Trajectories of Sexual Behavior in Adolescence and Sexual Health Outcomes in Early Adulthood Arielle Deutsch, Kristin Moilanen, Lisa Crockett (Event 2-018) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 2 Thursday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 2-018. Integrative Approaches: Prosocial Moral Cognitions, Emotions, Motivation, and Behaviors Chair: Drika W. Makariev Discussant: Gustavo Carlo Does Engaging in Prosocial Behavior Make You See the World Through Rose Colored Glasses? Links Between Prosocial Behavior, Empathy, and Social Information Processing Deborah Laible, Gustavo Carlo, Mairin Augustine, Tia Panfile The Moral Identity Q-Sort and Prosocial Behavior in Emerging Adulthood Courtney Ball, Daniel Lapsley, Paul Stey, Patrick Hill Children’s Reasoning about Prosocial Moral Dilemmas: Differences by Age and Intergroup Relations Drika Makariev, Kristin Lagattuta, Liat Sayfan (Event 2-017) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 19 Thursday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 2-017. More Than a Feeling: Psychosocial and Health Outcomes of Sexual Behavior in Adolescence Chair: Kristin L. Moilanen Discussant: Brian Wilcox How Late Adolescents Feel About Their First Experiences of Kissing, Touching and Four Other Sexual Behaviors Sara Vasilenko, Eva Lefkowitz, Jennifer Maggs 17 (Event 2-019) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 3 Thursday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am (Event 2-021) Invited Roundtable East Meeting 8 Thursday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 2-021. Invited Book Authors' Roundtable - Identities and Purposes in Youth: The Intersection of Development and Culture 2-019. Intergenerational Storytelling: What does it do for the Identity Development of Adolescent Offspring? Chair: Avril Thorne Moms Telling Tales: Maternal Disclosure With Adolescents in Conversations About the Personal Past Kate McLean, Sarah Morrison-Cohen The Elusive Construction of Identity: Traces of Mother-Adolescent Conversations in Their Narratives About the Offspring’s Life Tilmann Habermas Individual Identity Constructed Through Intergenerational Narratives Robyn Fivush, Widaad Zaman, Theo Waters, Natalie Merrill Moderator: Alice Schlegel, Frances McClelland Institute for Children, Youth and Families, University of Arizona Panelists: William Damon (New Paths to Purpose in Our Time (Free Press, 2009)), Stanford University Phil Hammack (Adolescence and the Politics of Identity: Lessons From the Field (Oxford University Press, 2011)), University of California-Santa Cruz Carol Markstrom (Culturally-Based Rituals as Mechanisms of Impact in Adolescent Development (University of Nebraska Press, 2009)), West Virginia University Abstract. Adolescents are presented with multiple possibilities for the formation of identities, as they venture from the certainties of the home base into the larger world. In traditional cultures, this was gaining a deeper understanding of one’s culture and how to behave as an adult within it. In modern societies the issues are more complex as the possibilities have greatly expanded. The members of this roundtable will address issues of adolescent identity formation and choice of life goals and purposes, focusing on their special cultural areas of research: For William Damon, American culture; for Phillip Hammock, the intersecting cultures of Israeli and Palestinian youth; for Carol Markstrom, American Indian cultures. (Event 2-020) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 7 Thursday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 2-020. Advances in Culturally and Contextually Relevant Measures for Adolescents of Color Chair: Kathryn Grant Discussant: Martha Wadsworth The Hopelessness Scale for Children in Ethnic Minority Adolescents Jocelyn Carter, David Meyerson, Kathryn Grant The Parental Schoolwork Support Measures: Scale Development and Psychometric Evaluation Antonio Polo, Kristen Zichinski, Katrina Davis Urban Norms as Risk or Protective Factor?: Development of the Urban Youth Norms Questionnaire Esteban Cardemil Biography. William Damon is Professor of Education at Stanford University and Director of the Stanford Center on Adolescence. Prior to coming to Stanford, he was University Professor and Director of the Center for the Study of Human Development at Brown University. For the past twenty-five years, Dr. 18 Damon has written on character development at all ages of human life. His books include The Moral Child (1990); Some Do Care: Contemporary Lives of Moral Commitment (1992) (with Anne Colby); Greater Expectations: Overcoming the Culture of Indulgence in Our Homes and Schools (1995); The Youth Charter (1997); Good Work: When Excellence and Ethics Meet (2001) (with Howard Gardner and Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi); The Moral Advantage (2004); and The Path to Purpose (2008). Dr. Damon was founding editor of New Direction for Child and Adolescent Development and is editor-in-chief of The Handbook of Child Psychology (1998 and 2006 editions). He was elected to membership in the National Academy of Education. Dr. Damon is working with Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi and Howard Gardner on a large project seeking to foster good work in key domains of American society. The domains include politics, law, journalism, business, the sciences, higher education, and philanthropy. an ever-shifting political context for sexual identity development in the United States. Professor Hammack has presented his research across the globe, including in Turkey, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Israel, France, Germany, Ireland, Spain, Canada, and at numerous settings in the United States. Biography. Carol A. Markstrom, Ph.D. is Professor at West Virginia University (WVU) in the Department of Technology, Learning, and Culture in the College of Human Resources and Education where she coordinates the Child Development and Family Studies program. She also teaches and supervises students in Native American Studies, as well as Women’s Studies. Her academic background includes an undergraduate degree in Family Relationships from the University of Minnesota, a master’s degree in Child Development and Family Relations from North Dakota State University, and a Ph.D. in Developmental Psychology from Utah State University. Topics of some of her publications span rituals and rites of passage during adolescence, identity formation, ego strength, adolescent participation in adult-sponsored activities, and spirituality and religiosity. Her 2008 book, Empowerment of North American Indian Girls: Ritual Expressions at Puberty offers an integration of her multidisciplinary interests in adolescent development, cultural anthropology, Native American studies, history, and women’s studies. She is currently Past President of the Society for Research on Identity Formation and is a member of the Society for Research on Adolescence, the American Anthropological Association, the Native Children’s Research Exchange, and the National Congress of American Indians. Biography. Phillip L. Hammack is Assistant Professor of Psychology at the University of California, Santa Cruz. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago in 2006 and has published widely in social, cultural, and developmental psychology. He is the author of Narrative and the Politics of Identity: The Cultural Psychology of Israeli and Palestinian Youth (Oxford, 2011), co-editor of The Story of Sexual Identity: Narrative Perspectives on the Gay and Lesbian Life Course (Oxford, 2009), and co-editor of the book series on Sexuality, Identity and Society published by Oxford University Press. Professor Hammack’s research examines identity development in social, cultural, and political context. He uses multiple methods to interrogate the relationship between person and setting. In one line of work, Professor Hammack highlights the identity dynamics involved in settings of intractable political conflict, with a focus on Israeli and Palestinian youth. In another line of work, he studies the narratives of youth with same-sex desire as they navigate 19 (Event 2-022) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 9 Thursday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am Thursday, 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm (Event 2-024) Poster Session 2 Exhibit Hall B Thursday, 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm 2-022. Transitions From High School up to Employment: The Influence of Ascribed and Achieved Characteristics Chair: Tabea Schlimbach Transitions From School to Vocational Training for Low-Qualified Pupils Birgit Reissig, Tabea Schlimbach The Relation Between Extraversion and Social Capital in Job-Searching: Sequential or Multiplicative? Pieter Baay, Marcel van Aken, Denise Ridder, Tanja Lippe PISA Competences and Transitional Pathways: Results From the Swiss TREE Study Sandra Hupka-Brunner, Thomas Meyer, Barbara Stalder, Anita Keller 1 Psychophysiological responding to 2D versus 3D film clips Daniel Bride, Sheila Crowell, Chloe Skidmore, Caitlin O'Connor, Tammy Nguyen, Erik Hansen, Jeanine Stefanucci 2 Does Neighborhood Environment Affect Girls’ Pubertal Onset? Findings from a Cohort Study Julianna Deardorff, Molly Fyfe, John Paul Ekwaru, Lawrence Kushi, Irene Yen 4 Time Attitudes and Risk Behaviors among Adolescents and Young Adults in Nigeria Samuel Oladipo, Zena Mello, Laura Finan, KrisAnn McBroom, Carmen Gutíerrez, Frank Worrell 5 Parenting during Toddlerhood and Adolescence as Predictors of the Timing of the Transition to Parenthood Morgan Bobo, Lee Raby, W Andrew Collins 6 Family Boundary Patterns, Sibling Warmth, and Adolescent Adjustment Sonnette Bascoe, Patrick Davies, E. Cummings 7 A Process-Person-Context Model of Children’s Social Competence: A Test of Some Hypotheses Based on Bronfenbrenner’s Bioecological Theory Godwin Ashiabi, Keri O'Neal 8 Family Resilience and Filipino Immigrant Families: Navigating Adolescence Jacqueline de Guzman, Donna Lero, Susan Lollis Family Health History Communication and Cancer Worry in Families of Latino Young Adults Rosalie Corona, John Quillin, Vivian Rodriguez, Joann Bodurtha Thursday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm (Event 2-023) Paper Discussion Symposium East Ballroom Salon A Thursday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 2-023. Longitudinal Research Examining Stability and Change Over Time in Adolescent Sexual Orientation and Mental Health Chair: Michael P. Marshal Discussant: S. Bryn Austin Individual Trajectories of Depression and Suicidality among LGB Youth Sarah Dermody, Michael Marshal, JeeWon Cheong, Chad Burton, Mark Friedman Longitudinal Latent Trajectories of Sexual Orientation Identity Jerel Calzo, S. Bryn Austin, Katherine Masyn, Hee-Jin Jun, Heather Corliss Longitudinal Relations Between Same-Sex Attraction and Mental Health Outcomes in Teenagers: Depression and Suicidality JeeWon Cheong, Mark Friedman, Michael Marshal 9 20 10 Young adults who live at home: The precocious events that lead them there Leslie Haughey, Michael Merten 21 Grade Grubbing May be Hazardous to Your Health: High School and Student Goal Orientations and Associations with Academic Stress Sarah Miles, Amy Alamar, Denise Pope 11 You Can Do Better: Longitudinal Links Among Parents’ Competitiveness and Adolescents’ Depressive Symptoms Toi Sin Arvidsson, Bao Ho, Jeffrey Cookston, Delia Saenz 22 A Longitudinal Examination of Academic Identification in African American Adolescents Tanee Hudgens, Akilah Swinton, Elizabeth Adams, Beth Kurtz-Costes 12 Longitudinal Associations between Interparental Conflict and Social Skills and Loneliness in Adolescence Benjamin Feld, Laura DeRose 23 Facebook and the Social Transition from High School to College Melissa Wurster, Melissa Witkow 13 Risky Behaviors in Chilean Female Adolescents: The Role of Mother-Daughter Connectedness Erin Darlington, Benedict McWhirter, Ellen McWhirter 24 Examining Diverse Expressions of Civic Engagement: The Role of Contexts Michelle Sloper, Laura Wray-Lake 25 “My actions do make a difference”: Urban Adolescents’ Perceptions of Themselves as School Change Agents Alexis Harris, Amy Syvertsen 14 The Role of Family Climate in Sibling Relationships Emma Espel, Julia Dmitrieva 15 Perceptions of Neighborhood as Predictors of Aggression in Urban African American Youth: A Multilevel Analysis Edna Romero, Maryse Richards, Patrick Harrison, Devin Carey 26 Stressful events of young offenders in southern Brazil Débora Dell'Aglio, Fernanda Nardi 27 The Development of the Mexican-American Bicultural Scale Camille Basilio, George Knight, Megan O'Donnell, Mark Roosa, Adriana UmañaTaylor, Marisela Torres 16 Perceived Discrimination among Asian American College Students: The Role of Emotion Suppression and Ethnic Identity Crystalia Sulaiman, Irene Park 28 Perceived Discrimination and the Development of Mexican American Adolescents’ Prosocial Tendencies: Examining the Moderating Role of Cultural Values Megan O'Donnell, George Knight, Aerika Brittian, Gustavo Carlo, Adriana UmañaTaylor, Mark Roosa 17 The role of relationship quality in Community Service in Adolescence Gabriela Christoph, Burkhard Gniewosz, Heinz Reinders 18 Game On: Sport Participation as a Protective Factor for Adjustment Among Affluent Adolescents Amanda Ward, Nicole Arola, Lea Travers, Amy Bohnert, Edin Randall 29 Emotional Response Profiles to Racial Discrimination: Does Racial Identity Predict Affective Patterns? Shawn Jones, Enrique Neblett 19 Boys Think They are Better at Math and Science, But Girls Will Take the Classes Anyway: Sex Differences in Taking Advanced Classes Blake Nielsen, Anna Gordon, Joan Barth 30 Adolescent and Emerging Adult Women’s perceptions of Heterosexual Scripting in Music Videos: Associations with Sexual Stereotypes Kathleen Rodgers, Stacey Hust, Thomas Power 20 Problematic Internet Use and Adjustment of Chinese Adolescents Problematic Internet Use and Adjustment of Chinese Adolescents Guanqi Hang, Paul Stey, Daniel Lapsley 21 31 The Joint Influence of Maternal Stress on Mother and Teacher Ratings of ADHD: A Multivariate Response Model Daniella Biondic, Dillon Browne, Judith Wiener 43 Interpersonal Peer Victimization: Unique Contributions to Adolescents’ Symptoms of Social Anxiety and Depression Annette La Greca, Sherilynn Chan, Ryan Landoll, Rebecca Siegel 32 Exploring a Possible College Drinking Motive: Defiance James Harter, Michael MacLean 44 Adolescent Defending and Secondary Aggressing: Contrasting Peer Roles Across Traditional and Electronic Bullying Heather McCuaig Edge, Wendy Craig, Ashley Murphy-Legate 33 Teens who Drink: Risk Factors that Predict Alcohol Use Amy Baykey, Kyle Matsuba 45 Can Family Cohesion or School Support Moderate the Effect of Peer Victimization on Latino Youth’s Development? Alexander Reid, Artin Baghramian, Paige Seegan, Scott Plunkett, Andrew Behnke, Carolyn Henry 34 Dysfunctional Individuation, Perfectionism and Disordered Eating Attitudes Erin Reilly, Daniel Lapsley, Paul Stey 35 Fathers’ Direct and Indirect Effects on Adolescent Girls’ and Boys’ Disordered Eating Behaviors Elizabeth Blodgett Salafia, Amanda Bulat 46 Gender Differences in the Co-Perpetration of Bullying and Teen Dating Violence Jeff Temple, Patricia van den Berg, Melissa Peskin, Susan Tortolero 36 No nonsense Parenting and Sexual Resilience: Mediators in the Relationship between Cumulative Disadvantage and Academic Outcomes Antoinette Landor, Leslie Simons 47 Corumination Within Multiple Relationships in Emerging Adulthood Catherine Bagwell, Michelle Schmidt, Beth Kelly, Katelin Peterson 38 Traditional Gender Roles, Educational Beliefs, and Condom Attitudes in a Latino Adolescent Sample Rosalie Corona, Vera Lopez, Raquel Halfond 48 Relationship Qualities' Associations with Late Adolescents' and Emerging Adults’ Ambivalence about Sexual Intercourse Julie Hill, Julia Graber 39 Gender Differences in the Psychosocial Effects of Stressors on Multiethnic Urban Preadolescents Amitte Rosenfeld, Cassandra Stanton 49 Perceptions of Housing Services and Utilization Among Homeless Emerging Adults Tiffany Ryan, Sanna Thompson 41 Longitudinal Investigation of Popularity and Adolescent Cyber Social Behaviors Yan Li, Michelle Wright, Linda Camras 50 Mediating Effect of Emotional Intelligence, Self-efficacy and Self-esteem Between Perceived Emotional Warmth and Life Satisfaction Rita Zukauskiene, Oksana Malinauskiene, Rimantas Vosylis, Rasa Erentaite 42 Peer Victimization and Birth Date: The Relative Age Effect on Being Bullied Christine Blain-Arcaro, Amanda Krygsman, Cindy Do, Jennifer Hepditch, Shelley Hymel, Patricia McDougall, Lesley Cunningham, Kathy Short, Tracy Vaillancourt 51 Direct and indirect peer influence of adolescent non-suicidal self-injury: The role of friends’ depressive symptoms and impulsivity Matteo Giletta, William Burk, Ron Scholte, Rutger Engels, Mitchell Prinstein 22 52 Social Networks and Psychological WellBeing among Multiracial Early Adolescents Yiyuan Xu, Puanani Hee 63 When Life Hands you a Lemon: Learning Cognitive Reappraisal Through Intergenerational Storytelling Lauren Shapiro 53 Resource Control as an Organizing Feature in Adolescent Friendship Networks Kathryn Stump 64 Protective Factors Moderate the Association Between Children’s Daily Mood and Daily Intrafamilial Aggression Allison Maxwell, Brian Baucom, Gayla Margolin 54 Correlates of Prosocial Behavior of Ethnically/Racially Diverse Youth: School Community and Cross-Ethnic/Racial Contact Asha Spivak, Samantha Simmons, Sandra Graham, Jaana Juvonen 65 Development of a New Measure for Culture Brokering Vanja Lazarevic, Marcela Raffaelli 55 Romantic Experiences of Homeland and Diaspora South Asian Youth: Westernizing Processes of Media and Friends Amrit Dhariwal, Jennifer Connolly 66 The Effects of Three Interventions on Delinquent Behaviors Among Homeless Adolescents Yunhwan Kim, Natasha Slesnick 56 The Role of Sexual Activity in Peer Attachment Formation Harry Freeman, Jillian Logan, Alison Irvine 67 Developing Core Competencies in At-Risk Adolescents: Piloting the Positive Life Changes Intervention in an Alternative School Carly Dierkhising, Ariel Williamson, Misaki Natsuaki 57 Relations of Detachment and Separation with Adolescent Maladjustment: Relationship Quality With Parents and Peers as Moderators Justin Jager, Marc Bornstein, Diane Putnick, Charlene Hendricks, Cynthia Yuen 68 The Role of Close Intimate Friendship in the link between Reactive Aggression and Child Depressive Symptoms Teresa Preddy, Paula Fite, Michael Vitulano, Alden Gaertner 58 Acculturation and English Literacy Skills in Immigrant Chinese Adolescence Fanli Jia, Kateryna Synyak, Adrian Pasquarella, Alexandra Gottardo 69 Designing and Evaluating Implicit Association Tests for the Assessment of Aggression Dayton Richards, Mandi Burnette 59 Adolescent Authenticity: Associations with Parent Authenticity and Youth Mental Health Rachel Lucas-Thompson, Amanda Wenzel 70 Exploring the Safe Haven and the Secure Base: New Insights in the Relation Between Parenting, Attachment and Adolescent Autonomy Stijn Van Petegem, Wim Beyers, Bart Soenens, Maarten Vansteenkiste 60 Gender Invariance of the Children’s Attributional Style Questionnaire in a Community Sample of Low-Income Minority Adolescents Alyx Kesselring, Noni Gaylord-Harden, Daniel Dickson, Kathryn Grant 71 Expression of Self-Conscious Affect: Age and Gender Differences across Adolescence Dianna Lanteigne, Jenny Glozman, Alessia Milano, Michael Tung, Serena Wong, Tom Hollenstein 61 Another Venue for Problematic Interpersonal Behavior: Effects of Depressive and Anxious Symptoms on Social Networking Experiences Brian Feinstein, Vickie Bhatia, Rachel Hershenberg, Joanne Davila 23 72 I Just Can’t Stop Feeling Upset: Parent to Child Aggression and Emotion Regulation in Adolescence Larissa Borofsky, Darby Saxbe, Sandra Elmgren, Michelle Ramos, Xiao-Fei Yang, Gayla Margolin 82 A Retrospective Exploration of Stress and Trauma Experienced by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Adolescents Stephanie Lyon 83 Health Consequences of Racist and Antigay Discrimination for Multiple Minority Adolescents Brian Thoma, David Huebner 73 Adolescents’ Facial EMG Responses to Dynamic Emotional Expressions Jolien van der Graaff, Susan Branje, Minet de Wied, Anton Van Boxtel, Wim Meeus 84 From Love to Sex: Popular Music Lyrics 1960-2008 Brittany Hearon, Andrew Smiler 74 Relationships of Loneliness, Social Support, and Problem Behavior for Taiwanese Junior High School Students Yuh-Ling Shen, Tai-Lung Wu Thursday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 75 Autonomy-Supportive Middle School Classrooms: A Qualitative Study of Eight Teachers Alexandra Skoog, Rob Jagers, Nicholas Yoder (Event 2-025) Paper Discussion Symposium East Ballroom Salon C Thursday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 76 Emotions Following Moral Decision-Making and Adolescent’s Prosocial Behavior Maria Chaparro, Tina Malti, Marlis Buchmann 2-025. Should I Stay or Should I Go? Social Influences on Risk-Taking in Adolescence and Early Adulthood at Neural and Behavioral Levels 77 Parental Closeness Predicted Effortful Control and Executive Functioning in Emerging Adults Kelsie Hendrickson, Maria Wong, Kendra Westerhaus Chair: Jennifer Pfeifer Discussant: Laurence Steinberg An fMRI Study of Familial Influence on Adolescent Risk Taking Eva Telzer, Andrew Fuligni, Matt Lieberman, Adriana Galvan Risk-Taking, Social Exclusion, and Peer Influence in Adolescence and Early Adulthood: From Behavior to Brain Shannon Peake, Jennifer Pfeifer, Elizabeth Stormshak, Thomas Dishion Neurocognitive Buffers of Social Influence on Risky Driving in Adolescents Emily Falk 79 Negative Religious Messages and Separation from Religion among Transgender Youth Jno Glenn, Jenifer McGuire 80 Links among Adolescent Recognitions of Childhood Family Atmosphere, Disobedience toward Parents, and Current Ego Development Madoka Mogaki 81 Racial Identity among Chinese and Malay Adolescents in Singapore Tick-Ngee Sim, Glanies Ng 24 (Event 2-027) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 10 Thursday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 2-027. Stability and Change in Adolescents’ Civic Attitudes: Findings from Germany, the United States, and the Czech Republic Short and Long Term Prospective Effects of Neighborhood Risk on Youth Adjustment Lyndsey Moran, Liliana Lengua, Maureen Zalewski, Cara Kiff, Nicole Bush (Event 2-029) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 12 Thursday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm Chair: Jan Serek Discussant: Connie Flanagan Stability and Change of Socio-Political Attitudes in Adolescence: The Influence of Internal and External Motivation to Respond Without Prejudice Katharina Eckstein, Peter Noack, Thomas Martin, Burkhard Gniewosz Stability and Change in Domains of U. S. Emerging Adults’ Civic Attitudes during a Co-Curricular Community Service Experience Sara Johnson, Preston Britner How Easy Is to Become Alienated? Stability and Change of First-Time Voters’ Civic Attitudes over the Election Year Jan Serek, Zuzana Petrovicova, Petr Macek 2-029. Examining the Complexity of Teen Mothers’ Lives: Resources, Support, and Parenting Chair: Sarah Kendig Discussant: Ariel Kalil Teenage Mothers’ Utilization of Health Benefits: Influences of Social Support Kelly Purtell, Sarah Kendig, Rob Crosnoe, Liz Gershoff Teen Mothers’ and Fathers’ Accounts of Coparenting Relationships and DecisionMaking Before, During, and After Pregnancy Stefanie Mollborn, Janet Jacobs A Longitudinal Examination of Social Support and Self-esteem Interacting to Inform Mexican-origin Teen Moms’ Parenting Efficacy Adriana Umaña-Taylor, Amy Guimond, Kimberly Updegraff, Laudan Jahromi (Event 2-028) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 11 Thursday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm (Event 2-030) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 13 Thursday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 2-028. Putting DevelopmentalEcological Models to the Test: Mediators and Moderators of Neighborhood Risk on Adolescent Outcomes 2-030. Developmental Trajectories of Positive Affect Systems and Rewardrelated Circuitry During Adolescence: A Focus on Risk for Depression Chair: Elisa M. Trucco Discussant: Patrick H. Tolan Risky Neighborhoods, Parents, and Peers: A Cascade Model of Early Adolescent Substance Use and Reciprocal Influences Elisa Trucco, Craig Colder The Costs of Active Coping for Youth Residing in Urban Poverty Kristin Carothers, David Meyerson, Jocelyn Carter, Kathryn Grant Chair: Dana L. McMakin Positive Affect in Early Adolescence Predicts Volumetric Growth Trajectories in Right Caudate Between Early and Mid Adolescence Meg Dennison, Sarah Whittle, Murat Yücel, Nicholas Allen (continued) 25 The Rewarding Nature of Peer Acceptance in the Adolescent Brain Amanda Guyer, Justin Caouette, Clinton Lee, Daniel Pine, Eric Nelson Neural Response to Maternal Praise in Adolescents at High and Low Risk for Depression Jennifer Silk, Kyung Hwa Lee, Ronald Dahl, Greg Siegle Neural Aspects of Positive Affect in Late Adolescents with a History of Depression: Ventral Striatum Connectivity during Response to Monetary Reward Erika Forbes, Nikhil Kurapati, Daniel Shaw Gender Differences in the ‘Costs’ of Going to College: Distancing and Alienation from Family in Asian and Latino Emerging Adults Margarita Azmitia, Kimberley Radmacher Sex Differences in Parental Conditional Regard, Parents and Peers Intimacy Among Arab Youth Fadi Ayoub, Ruth Sharabany Vulnerability to the Experience of Conditional Parental Regard in the Academic Domain: Gender Differences and Possible Mechanisms Avi Assor, Anat Shavit Miller, Anat Moed (Event 2-031) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 14 Thursday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm (Event 2-033) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 17 Thursday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 2-031. Adolescents' Experiences of Music, Media and Popular Culture: Exploring Contexts, Engagement, Emotional and Personal Meanings 2-033. Development of Moral Emotions and Moral Personality in Adolescence Chair: Tobias Krettenauer Do Moral Choices Make Us Happy? The Development of Adolescents’ Emotions Following Moral Decision-Making Tina Malti, Marlis Buchmann Differential Relations of Guilt, Shame, and Sympathy to Prosocial Moral Reasoning, Prosocial and Aggressive Behaviors Gustavo Carlo, Meredith McGinley, Alexandra Davis Personality Traits and Moral Emotion Attributions as Predictors of Antisocial Conduct in Early Adulthood: Findings From a 20-Years Longitudinal Study Tobias Krettenauer, Jens Asendorpf, Gertrud Nunner-Winkler Age and Personality Differences in Adolescents’ and Emerging Adults’ Empathic and Non-Empathic Life Narratives Kendall Soucie, Ty Pattridge, Michelle Wright, Michael Pratt Chair: Susan A. O'Neill Adolescents’ Personal Meanings of Music in Real-World Contexts: An Exploratory Study of Youth Activity Engagement and Emotional Competence Susan O'Neill, Sandra Bosacki Ubiquitous and Interconnected: Adolescent Multimodal Experiences and Engagement with Music and Digital Media Deanna Peluso, Susan O'Neill Admiring, Aspiring and Becoming: Exploring Early Adolescents’ Real-World Music Learning Experiences Yaroslav Senyshyn, Susan O'Neill (Event 2-032) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 15 Thursday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 2-032. Gender Differences in Response to Parental Conditioning Regard, Perceived Value of Education and School Adaptation of Adolescents Chair: Margarita Azmitia 26 (Event 2-034) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 18 Thursday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm (Event 2-036) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 2 Thursday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 2-034. Contextual Influences on the Effectiveness of Interventions Conducted with Youth:Evidence from Three Meta-Analyses 2-036. Rumination and Depression in Adolescence: Pathways, Predictors, and Processes Chairs: Lauren B. Alloy, Amy Mezulis Rumination Mediates the Association Between Anxiety and Depression in Late Adolescence for Girls Gretchen Gudmundsen, Molly Adrian, Ann Vander Stoep, Elizabeth McCauley Executive Function, Cognitive Vulnerability, and Depressive Symptoms: A Multi-Method, Prospective Study Benjamin Shapero, Lauren Alloy, Lyn Abramson The Role of Maternal Depression in the Intergenerational Transmission of Cognitive Vulnerability Olga Obraztsova, Nicole Newton, Denise LaBelle, Lauren Alloy, Lyn Abramson Emotional and Physiological Reactivity Predict Cognitive Reactivity to Induced Stress Marissa Rudolph, Amy Mezulis, Katherine Davis, Tyler Laney, Kara Pegram, Sarah Crystal Chair: Kathryn Grant Discussant: David DuBois Meta-analysis of Mentoring Interventions to Affect Juvenile Delinquency and Associated Problems Peter Lovegrove, Patrick Tolan The Effects of Coping Interventions on Psychosocial Functioning in Youth: A MetaAnalytic Review Noni Gaylord-Harden, Sophia Duffy, Jacqueline Doxie, David DuBois, Kathryn Grant, Lindsay Nolan Community-Based Mental Health and Behavioral Programs for Low-Income, Urban Youth: A Meta-Analytic Review Farahnaz Farahmand, Sophia Duffy, Megha Tailor, David DuBois, Aaron Lyon, Kathryn Grant, Jennifer Czarlinski, Olivia Masini (Event 2-035) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 19 Thursday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm (Event 2-037) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 3 Thursday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 2-035. The Internet as a Tool for Positive Youth Development: Benefits and Risk for LGBT Youth 2-037. How do we Understand Narrative Identity? Three Principled Approaches With Methodological Implications Chair: Michele Ybarra Online and Offline Bullying and Social Support: Predictors of Mental Well-Being for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Youth Emily Greytak, Joseph Kosciw Technology-mediated Benefits and Risks for LGBT Youth versus non-LGBT Youth Kimberly Mitchell, Michele Ybarra, Josephine Korchmaros Online Threats to Positive Youth Development: Online Behaviors Related to Sexual Risk Offline Josephine Korchmaros, Michele Ybarra, Kimberly Mitchell Chair: Tilmann Habermas Merging Monologic and Dialogic Methods to Capture Narrative Identity Development Avril Thorne The Thematic Life Story Interview as a Method to tap Identity Formative Processes Elli Schachter Small Story Telling Practices in Adolescence Michael Bamberg 27 (Event 2-038) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 7 Thursday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 2-038. Moving Beyond Selection and Influence Processes in Adolescents’ Social Networks: Unraveling the Roles of Different Behaviors, Networks, and Status Creating Youth Systems to Transform the Lives of Young People in Low-income Communities Jonathan Zaff, Elizabeth Jones, Forrest Moore, Andrew Wagoner, Emily Lin, Ernest Bihm, Jingtong Pan, Elizabeth Shuey, Jennifer Prescott, Keren Elkayam Thursday, 12:45 pm - 1:45 pm (Event 2-041) Emerging Scholar Session East Meeting 16 Thursday, 12:45 pm - 1:45 pm Chair: Jan Kornelis Dijkstra Discussant: Mitchell J. Prinstein Peer Effects of Aggressive and Prosocial Behavior in Early Adolescence: An Empirical Test of Selection and Influence Andres Molano, Stephanie Jones, Joshua Brown, Lawrence Aber Popular-Aggressive and Popular-Prosocial Youth: Selection and Influence Processes in Friendship and Affiliative Networks Handrea Logis, Hai-Jeong Ahn, Philip Rodkin, Scott Gest The Effect of Status Norms on Selection and Influence Processes in Adolescents’ Antisocial Attitudes Tobias Stark, Ashwin Rambaran, Jan Kornelis Dijkstra 2-041. Emerging Scholars Event Coffee & Conversation I Moderator: Andrea Finlay A Day in the Life of an Assistant Professor Jeffrey Cookston Mentoring Undergraduate and Graduate Students Eva Lefkowitz Work-Life Balance Vonnie McLoyd Applied and Policy Research Stephen Russell Thursday, 1:45 pm - 3:15 pm (Event 2-039) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 8 Thursday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm (Event 2-042) Poster Session 3 Exhibit Hall B Thursday, 1:45 pm - 3:15 pm 2-039. Communities collaborating to promote positive youth development: Theory, practice, and research Chair: Forrest Moore Community Youth Development Initiative: Promoting Youth Engagement through Collaboration Lisa Westrich, Amy Gerstein, Maria Fernandez Say Yes to Education in Syracuse David Osher, Rebecca Herman Communities that Care: Using Prevention Science to Prevent Drug Use and Delinquency J. David Hawkins, Richard Catalano 28 1 Neural Correlates of Incentive Processing in Adolescence: Insights from Social Phobia and Early-life Behavioral Inhibition Clinton Lee, Justin Caouette, Koraly PerezEdgar, Nathan Fox, Monique Ernst, Daniel Pine, Amanda Guyer 2 Assessment of Inattention and Hyperactivity in Youth with Spina Bifida Utilizing the SNAP-IV: Influence of Illness Severity and Gender. Lauren O'Hara, Grayson Holmbeck 4 Attitudes toward the Past, the Present, and the Future in Nigeria and in the United States among Adolescents and Young Adults Laura Finan, Zena Mello, Samuel Oladipo, KrisAnn McBroom, Carmen Gutíerrez, Frank Worrell 14 Siblings Versus Parents and Peers: Relative Effects of Sibling Conflict and Externalizing Problems on Youth Externalizing Problems Ivy Defoe, Skyler Hawk, Loes Keijsers, Susan Branje, Kirsten Buist, Judith Dubas, Marcel van Aken, Pol van Lier, Hans Koot, Wim Meeus 5 The Role of Parenting Attributions and Perceptions on Child Negativity during Adolescent Mother-Child Interactions Laura Rose, Courtney Green, Charissa Cheah 15 Differences in Prediction of Delinquency: A Comparison of Parent- and AdolescentReports Jennifer Hayman, Sarah Domoff, Carolyn Tompsett 6 The Interaction between Behavioral Control and Family Routine among African American Families with Adolescents Mia Budescu, Ronald Taylor 16 Participation in Authoritative Communities as a Predictor of Youth Adjustment Marjorie Gunnoe 7 Poverty trajectories in childhood are associated with poor academic and social/emotional outcomes in eighth grade: ECLS-K findings Sarah Oberlander, Amy Madigan, Sarah Potter 8 9 17 Ethnic Selection of Extracurricular Activities and Sense of Belonging in Urban Middle Schools Casey Knifsend, Jaana Juvonen 18 Trajectories of Participation in Athletics and Positive Youth Development: The Influence of Sport Type Jennifer Agans Parental Conflict and Emotional Insecurity: A Test of Cultural Moderation among Chinese Families Rebecca Y. M. Cheung, Yan Li, E. Cummings 19 Parental Educational Expectations and Academic Efficacy in Adolescent Twins Adrienne Woods, Kathryn Harden, Natalie Kretsch, Daniel Briley, Elliot Tucker-Drob Relational Aggression in Observed Family Interactions of Female Juvenile Offenders Erin Taylor, Charles Borduin 20 Family Life Education in India: An Overview Bijaya Malik 21 Refugee Immigrant Adolescents: The Relationships Between Peer Connectedness and Academic Self-Efficacy, Educational Barriers, Parental Monitoring, and School Engagement Laura Ramzy, Krista Chronister 10 Variations in domain specific parenting practices and parent-adolescent conflict Nadia Sorkhabi, Ellen Middaugh 11 Relation Importance of Parental Behaviors to Latino Adolescents’ Integrity, Abilities, Achievement, and Family Life Dani Yomtov, Dan Weisbach, Lidia Corral, Scott Plunkett 22 Direct and Indirect Effects of Social Class on Career Expectations in Adolescence Sarah Schmitt-Wilson, Marilyn Welsh 12 The Effects of Couple Relationship Satisfaction on Family Conflict and on Adolescents’ Future Antisocial Behavior Jenna Wheeler, Benedict McWhirter, Thomas Dishion, Elizabeth Stormshak 23 Academic Performance and the MiddleSchool Transition: External and Internal Resiliency Martin Jones, Neil Perdue, David Estell, Joseph Hansel 13 Expressing Love to Adolescents: Diverse Mothers’ Beliefs and Behaviors Robbie Richwine, Christy Buchanan 29 24 Getting Involved: Predictors of Community Commitment in a Longitudinal Analysis Across Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood Melissa Sleightholm, Michael Pratt, Joan Norris, Susan Alisat 35 Disordered Eating Attitudes in Middle School: Associations with Individual, Family, and School-Level Factors Jessica Cance, Alexandra Loukas, Anna Talley 25 Empowering Youth through Photovoice Suzanne Pritzker, Alicia LaChapelle 36 Attitudes of Youth Who Obtain or Provide Reproductive Health Products and Services Daniel LeBouthillier, Scott Ronis 26 Tribal differences in adolescent adjustment following post-election violence in Kenya Anne Gitere, Sophie Muchina, Abigael Bett, Stephanie Milan 37 The Role of Gender in Determining Sexual Motives in a Hookup Shannon Snapp, Brianna Cheney, Margaret Galiani, Rene' Lento 27 Role of Bicultural Identification on AnxiousDepressed Symptoms for Asian and Latino Adolescents Taveeshi Gupta, Selcuk Sirin, Patrice Ryce, Sumie Okazaki 38 Sleep Disturbances in Young Adolescents with Spina Bifida, and the Relation to Pain Intensity and Health-Related Quality of Life Alexandra Psihogios, Grayson Holmbeck 39 Financial adaptation among young adults: Coping with financial strain during economic recession Soyeon Shim, Jing Xiao, Chuanyi Tang, Noel Card 28 Mid-Adolescent Predictors of Life Satisfaction in Early Adulthood: Chinese American and European American Contrasts Carol Huntsinger, Paul Jose 29 Effects of Racial Discrimination and Ethnic Identity on Depression among Cambodian American Adolescents Cindy Sangalang 40 Beyond the Munchies: Self-reported Marijuana Consequences and Implications for Intervention Research Theresa Walter, Jason Kilmer, Christine Lee, Diane Logan 30 Influences on Gender Role Attitudes among Mexican Adolescents Megan Kuykendoll 41 Bullying Behaviour and Adolescent Risk Factors in a High-Risk Sample: A Longitudinal Intergenerational Study Lindsey Barrieau, Dale Stack, Leah Enns, Lisa Serbin, Jane Ledingham, Alex Schwartzman 31 Traits of Autism Spectrum Disorder in College Students: Relations to Social and Emotional Functioning Elizabeth Baroni, Melissa Hord, Ethan Rothstein, Patricia Dieter, Cynthia Erdley 42 Sexual and Nonsexual Peer Victimization During Adolescence: Connections to Social Status Carie Buchanan, Patricia McDougall, Shelley Hymel, Terry Waterhouse 32 Middle Childhood Peer Competence and Peers’, Parents’ and Romantic Partners’ Concurrent and Prospective Influences on Adolescent Alcohol Use Clio Pitula, Michelle Englund 43 Reputational Peer Victimization and Substance Use in Adolescence: A Prospective Study Sherilynn Chan, Annette La Greca, Whitney Herge, Betty Lai 33 Surfing the Urge to Use Alcohol: An Adolescent Treatment Study Jennifer Harris, David Stewart, Ben Felleman 44 Age and Gender Moderate the Relation Between Internalizing Symptoms and Peer Vicitimization: A Prospective Study Tess Drazdowski, Wendy Kliewer 34 Developmental Considerations Promoting Media Literacy Among Early Adolescents Deborah Schooler, Andrés Núñez, Ricardo Chavez 30 45 Links between Bully Victimization and Substance-Use in Early Adolescence: The Mediating Role of Self-Esteem Mrinalini Rao, Dorothy Espelage, Todd Little 56 To accept or to reject: what does one expect? The effects of rejection sensitivity on future adolescent romantic relationships Ann Spilker, Christopher Hafen, Joanna Chango, Emiy Loeb, Joseph Allen 46 Associations between Intimacy Skills and Friendship Intimacy: A Longitudinal Study Chong-Man Chow, Holly Roelse, Duane Buhrmester 57 The impact of psychological need satisfaction at home and at school on adolescent health behaviors Sari Arel, Geneviève Taylor, Richard Koestner 47 Perceptions of Friendship Among Youth With Distressed Friends Erin Hill, Lance Swenson 58 There is More Stress Involved in Adolescent Anxiety than You Might Think: Cortisol and Anxiety Disorder Symptom Development Stefanie Nelemans, William Hale, Susan Branje, Wim Meeus 48 The Relationship between Narcissism and Friendship Qualities in Adolescents: Gender as a Moderator Hui Zhou, Yan Li, Bao Zhang 59 Never You, Always Me: Cognitive Errors Predicting Depressive Symptoms in 12 - 15 Years old Adolescents Karlijn Kindt, Rutger Engels, Yuli Tak, Rinka Van Zundert 49 Parent-Adolescent Conflict: The Role of Empathy Alexandra Main, Joseph Campos, Qing Zhou 50 Development of Adolescents’ Peer Crowd Identification in Relation to Changes in Problem Behaviors Suzan Doornwaard, Susan Branje, Tom ter Bogt, Wim Meeus 60 The Effects of BMI and Eating- and WeightRelated Disturbances on Depression Trajectories Across Adolescence Ashley Morgan, Jennine Rawana 51 Neuroticism, Social Support, and the Timing of First Parenthood: A Developmental Sequence Olaf Reis, Holger von der Lippe, Mareike Doernte 61 Trajectories of Internalizing Mental Health Symptoms for Immigrant Adolescents: A Longitudinal Investigation Selcuk Sirin, Patrice Ryce, Taveeshi Gupta, Dalal Katsiaficas, Carola Suarez-Orozco, Lauren Rogers-Sirin 52 Perceived High-status Peers’ Influence on Early Adolescents’ Physical Aggression: A Longitudinal Study Shuangju Zhen, Hongling Xie, Wei Zhang 62 Mental Health and Suicidality Among Adolescents in Foster Care Catherine White, Kirk O'Brien 53 Developmental Trajectories of Physical, Verbal and Relational Aggression and Victimization During Childhood and Adolescence Idean Ettekal, Gary Ladd 63 Differential Susceptibility to the Environment: Assessing the Convergent Validity of Behavioral and Physiological Indicators Lauren Troy, Joanna Herres, Roger Kobak 54 Mediating Effect of Perceived Closeness to Parents in the Relation Between Parenting and Adolescent Empathy and Prosocial Behavior Hana Yoo, Xin Feng, Randal Day 64 The Effect of Executive Functions in the Relationship Between Active Coping and Internalizing Symptoms in AfricanAmerican Youth Arie Zakaryan, Noni Gaylord-Harden, Alyx Kesselring 55 Adolescent Romantic Relationships and Depressive Symptoms: The Importance of Emotion Regulation and Close Friendships David Szwedo, Joanna Chango, Megan Schad, Erin Miga, Amanda Hare, Nell Manning, Joseph Allen 65 Reliability and Validity of the Risk Tolerance Scale in College Students Catherine Chou, Shelly Sadek, Nancy Guerra 31 66 Wilderness Therapy for Adolescents with Substance Abuse Issues: Attitudinal Change and Client Perspectives Laura Millls 76 The Role of Adolescents' Morality and Identity in Volunteering. Age and Gender Differences in a Process model. Anne van Goethem, Anne van Hoof, Marcel van Aken, Jan Boom, Bram Orobio de Castro 67 Trajectories of Positive Youth Development, Substance Use, and Delinquency in a Nationally Representative Sample of US Adolescents Michael Warren, Laura Wray-Lake 77 Assessing Reliability in Measures of Adolescent Intentional Self-Regulation: The Alpha and the Omega Christopher Napolitano, Megan Mueller, Kristina Schmid, G. John Geldhof 68 Relation of Parents' Beliefs About Aggression to Changes in Children's Beliefs and Actual Aggression Over Time Erin Bishop, Malcolm Watson 78 The Developing Religious Self: The Longitudinal Relationships Between Religious Commitment and Religious High Point Stories Susan Alisat, Michael Pratt, Wissam AlDabbagh 69 A Short-Term Longitudinal Study of the Links Between Personality Disorder Traits, Physical and Social Aggression and Nonaggressive Antisocial Behavior Roseann Larstone, Shelley Hymel, Joanna Gentsch, Elica Rahdar, Lisa Rosen, Marion Underwood 79 Using the IPSQ-Sort to Examine Identity Style of Mandarin speaking Adolescents Hai-Yun Yang, Douglas Maynard, Joe Pittman 70 Difficult Temperament, Attachment Security, and Risk Taking During Adolescence Anne Stright 80 Adolescent Identity Commitment, Automatic Thoughts, and Psychological States: An Examination of Hobfoll’s 71 Cognitive Bias = Emotional Bias: Interpretations of Cues as Predictors of Emotion Reactions after Peer Victimization Ashley Murphy-Legate, Allison Rinne, Wendy Craig, Tom Hollenstein Conservation of Resources Theory Kun-Hu Chen, Keng-Ling Lay 82 The Harassment due to Gender Nonconformity Scale: Psychometric properties and associations with depression Elana August, Alexa Martin-Storey 72 Adolescents’ Emotion Regulation Strategies, Self-Concept, and Internalizing Behaviors Manying Hsieh, Anne Stright 83 Young People’s Digital Lives: The Impact of Digital Media Use and Interpersonal Relationships on Adolescents’ Sense of Identity Katie Davis 73 Childhood Patterns of Mental Health, Deviant Friends in Early Adolescence, and Health and Impairment Across Adolescence Jeffrey Armstrong, Paula Ruttle, Linnea Burk, Marilyn Essex 84 Models of Internalizing Symptoms in LGBTQ Youth Reconsidered: Mediation vs. Moderation Jordan Simonson, Sarah Crystal, Amy Mezulis 74 Adolescents’ accounts of helping and hurting others: Lessons about the development of moral agency Stacia Bourne, Holly Recchia, Cecilia Wainryb 75 Moderating Influences of Psychological Separation from the Father on Self-Focused Life Views and Maladaptive Cognitions Madhavi Menon, Darren Stern, Elizabeth Castillo 32 Thursday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm (Event 2-044) Paper Discussion Symposium East Ballroom Salon C Thursday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm (Event 2-042.5) Emerging Scholar Session East Meeting 16 Thursday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 2-044. Explaining responses to bullying, victimization and other interpersonal stress: Emotion, goals, competence and the role of parents 2-042.5. Emerging Scholars Community Meeting Emerging Scholar Representatives: Carolyn Spellings, Laura Wray-Lake Chair: Melanie J. Zimmer-Gembeck Peer Harassment and Socio-emotional Adjustment: The Moderating Role of Parents’ Victimization-Related Beliefs Wendy Troop-Gordon, Haeli Gerardy Anticipated Coping with Interpersonal Stressors: Associations with the Emotional Reactions of Sadness, Anger, and Fear Melanie Zimmer-Gembeck, Danielle Lees, Ellen Skinner Developing Relationships, Being Cool, and Not Looking Like a Loser: Social Goal Orientation Predicts Responses to Peer Aggression Jamie Abaied, Karen Rudolph All student and new professional attendees are invited to join the Emerging Scholar Representatives for afternoon snacks and conversation. This event is designed both to be an open forum for discussion about the needs and experiences of emerging scholars in SRA. Emerging Scholar Committee members will share information about new initiatives to gather feedback from attendees on key issues. Attend this meeting and have a chance to win a free one-year SRA membership! (Event 2-043) Paper Discussion Symposium East Ballroom Salon A Thursday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm (Event 2-045) Roundtable East Meeting 1 Thursday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 2-043. Health Disparities in Disadvantaged Adolescents: Exploring the Physiological Pathways of Interpersonal and Environmental Stressors 2-045. Social Media Use and Psychosocial Development Moderator: Brendesha Tynes Panelists: Jenna Weidenbenner, Aimee Rickman, Gabriela Walker Chair: Leah Doane Sampey Discussant: Andrew J. Fuligni Life Course Socioeconomic Status, ParentChild Asynchrony, and Physiological Responses to Family Conflict Meanne Chan, Edith Chen Relationships of Race/Ethnicity and Discrimination With Systolic Blood Pressure Akilah Dulin Keita, Krista Casazza, Amanda Willig, Belinda Needham, Jose Fernandez Perceived Discrimination and Diurnal Cortisol Profiles: Examining Relations Among Mexican American Adolescents Katharine Zeiders, Leah Doane Sampey, Mark Roosa 33 (Event 2-046) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 10 Thursday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm (Event 2-048) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 12 Thursday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 2-046. The Distinct Functions of Intimacy versus Passion: Advancements in Understanding Romantic Relationship Dynamics in Adolescence 2-048. Externalizing Behavior in Maltreated Adolescents: Elucidating Developmental Pathways Chair: Penelope K. Trickett Community Violence Exposure and Aggressive Behavior Among a Sample of Maltreated and Non-maltreated Adolescents Kristopher Stevens, Penelope Trickett Developmental Relations Between Depressive Symptoms and Externalizing Behavior: Moderation by Gender Among Maltreated Adolescents Matthew Brensilver, Ferol Mennen The Developmental Pathway from Pubertal Timing to Sexual Activity and Substance Use for Maltreated Adolescents Sonya Negriff, Penelope Trickett Chairs: Jennifer Connolly, Shmuel Shulman Quality of Interaction, Sexual Behavior, and Mood in Adolescent Romantic Relationships: A Diary Data Approach Sophie Walsh, Shmuel Shulman, Gil Levi, Maya Cohen-Carmeli Romantic Motives and Styles in a CrossNational Sample of South Asian Youth: The Role of Parents and Friends Amrit Dhariwal, Jennifer Connolly Intimate and Passionate Experiences and Links to Conflict and Jealousy in Adolescent Romantic Relationships: A Dyadic Perspective Inge Seiffge-Krenke, William Burk (Event 2-049) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 13 Thursday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm (Event 2-047) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 11 Thursday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 2-049. Why Adolescents’ Experiences of Positive Events and Their Reactions to Them May Matter 2-047. Social Inventions in Different Countries to Improve the Transition to Adulthood Chair: Amy L. Gentzler Discussant: Erika E. Forbes Young adolescents’ emotional reactions and regulatory responses to positive life events and links to depressive symptoms Amy Gentzler, Chit Yi, Nicholas Larson Does experiencing positive events lead to greater happiness among adolescents? Paul Jose, Erica Chadwick Associations between young adolescents’ responses to positive events and interpersonal outcomes Cara Palmer, Meagan Ramsey, Amy Gentzler Chair: Stephen F. Hamilton Juventude em Cena (Youth in Scene): Vulnerable Youth in Brazil as Protagonists Silvia Koller, Ana Lazzaretti Political Incorporation in Emerging Adulthood: The Potential of National Service Connie Flanagan, Leslie Gallay, Taehan Kim, Itay Gabay Abriendo Caminos: Action Research to Strengthen Supports to Vulnerable Youth in Latin America Mary Hamilton, Stephen Hamilton 34 (Event 2-050) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 14 Thursday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm among Recently Immigrated Hispanic Adolescents Sabrina Des Rosiers, Seth Schwartz, Shi Huang, Jennifer Unger, Elma LorenzoBlanco, Juan Villamar, Daniel Soto, Lourdes Baezconde-Garbanati 2-050. Contextual Influences on Peer Processes: Examining Organized Outof School Activities Chair: Jennifer Fredricks The Contribution of Extracurricular Activities to Adolescent Friendships: New Insights through Social Network Analysis David Schaefer, Sandi Simpkins Association of Urban Young Adolescent’s Peer Processes and the Quality of Structured Youth Programs David Hansen, William Skorupski Development of Prosocial Values within Youth Programs: The Role of Peer Processes Reed Larson, Lene Arnett Jensen, Hyeyoung Kang, Aisha Griffith, Vicky Rompala More than Leisure: Organized Activity Participation and Social Adjustment among Adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorders Amy Bohnert, Rebecca Wasserman Lieb (Event 2-052) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 17 Thursday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 2-052. Sexual Identity Development in Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Youth: Risk and Protective Roles Chair: Hallie R. Bregman Discussant: Brian Willoughby Predictors of Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Identity Profiles Hallie Bregman, Matthew Page, Kristin Lindahl, Neena Malik Initial Disclosures of Sexual Orientation and Sexual Identity Development Among Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Youth Nathan Doty, Neena Malik, Kristin Lindahl Sexual Identity Difficulty in LGB Youth: Religious Conflict, Stress, and Mental Health Outcomes Matthew Page, Hallie Bregman, Kristin Lindahl, Neena Malik (Event 2-051) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 15 Thursday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 2-051. Perceived Discrimination Among Hispanics: Links with Psychosocial and Health Outcomes (Event 2-053) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 18 Thursday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm Chair: Seth J. Schwartz Discussant: Richard M. Lee Discrimination and Mental Health among Latino College Students: Mediators and Moderators Irene Park, May Kim, Crystalia Sulaiman, Richard Lee Ethnic Identity Development and Ethnic Discrimination: Examining Dynamic Associations Over Time for Latina Adolescent Mothers Russell Toomey, Adriana Umaña-Taylor, Kimberly Updegraff, Laudan Jahromi The Role of Perceived Discrimination and Negative Perceived Context of Reception on the Involvement in multi-problem behaviors 2-053. Effects of School-Based Interventions on Urban, Low-Income Youth Chair: David DuBois School-Based Mental Health and Behavioral Programs for Low-Income, Urban Youth: A Meta-Analytic Review Farahnaz Farahmand, Kathryn Grant, Antonio Polo, Sophia Duffy, David DuBois (continued) 35 (Event 2-055) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 2 Thursday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm Effects of the Positive Action Pogram on Social-Emotional Outcomes in Chicago Public Schools Kendra Lewis, Alan Acock, Niloofar Bavarian, Joseph Day, Peter Ji, Margaret Malloy, Marc Shure, Naida Silverthorn, Samuel Vuchinich, Brian Flay Impacts of the 4Rs Program on Classroom-, Teacher-, and Child-level Outcomes in Elementary and Middle School Stephanie Jones, Joshua Brown, Lawrence Aber 2-055. Innovative Approaches to Understanding Informant Discrepancies in Developmental Research Chair: Andres De Los Reyes A Holistic Approach to Studying Parental Monitoring Melissa Lippold, Mark Greenberg, Linda Collins Discrepancies about Adolescent Relationships as a Function of Informant Attachment and Depressive Symptoms Katherine Ehrlich, Jude Cassidy, Carl Lejuez, Stacey Daughters Training Informants to Provide Reports of Adolescent and Family Behavior Based on Settings of Behavioral Expression Andres De Los Reyes, Katherine Ehrlich, Anna Swan, Tana Luo, Michael Van Wie, Shairy Pabon (Event 2-054) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 19 Thursday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 2-054. New Insights in the Effects of Exposure to Smoking and Alcohol in Movies on Smoking and Drinking Behavior of Adolescents Chair: Renske Koordeman Discussant: Rutger C. Engels Exposure to smoking in movies and its relation to adolescents’ starting and continuing smoking Sonya Dal Cin, James Sargent, Mike Stoolmiller New Evidence from Europe on the Impact on Adolescents of Film Images of Smoking and Drinking Kate Hunt, Helen Sweeting, Marion Henderson, Danny Wight, James Sargent Do We Act Upon What We See? Direct Effects of Alcohol Cues in Movies on Alcohol Consumption of Young People. Renske Koordeman, Emmanuel Kuntsche, Doeschka Anschutz, Rick Baaren, Rutger Engels (Event 2-056) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 3 Thursday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 2-056. Relation Between Language Brokering and Family Dynamics in Immigrant Families Chair: Vanja Lazarevic Discussant: Vanja Lazarevic Language Brokering, Interactional Styles, and Parental Behaviors Among Latino Mother- Child Dyads Christina Granillo Understanding Language Brokering within Immigrant Chinese Families Across Adolescence Josephine Hua, Catherine Costigan Found in Translation: Language Brokering & Prosocial Development in Young Adults from Immigrant Families Shu-Sha Guan, Patricia Greenfield, Marjorie Faulstich Orellana 36 (Event 2-057) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 7 Thursday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm disputes. Although responsibility for these glaring educational gaps is, no doubt, broadly distributed, a key contributor to these disparities evidently turns on the differences that divide the culturally sanctioned ways of knowing practiced by Indigenous and nonIndigenous populations. If, as has been widely argued, Indigenous learners routinely employ ways of knowing that are importantly different from those commonly practiced within the cultural mainstream, and if the forms of pedagogy to which such students are routinely exposed are set within knowledge frameworks that Indigenous learners experience as foreign and hostile, then trouble is automatically afoot, and school failures and lost opportunities automatically follow. The research to be reported in this symposium takes up these challenges by carefully exploring possible differences in the culturally sanctioned ways of knowing currently practiced by Indigenous learners in both Canada and the US, all with the aim of better understanding those conditions responsible for our collective failure to meet such unmet educational needs. 2-057. To Be Me or Not to Be Me? Authenticity and Implications for WellBeing Chair: Kätlin Peets Discussant: William M. Bukowski Characteristics of Peers With Whom Adolescents Feel (In)Authentic Julie Bowker The Role of Relational (In)authenticity in Social Adjustment Kätlin Peets, Camilla Olsbom, Ernest Hodges Coherence Between Thought and Action: Implications for Self-Worth Ernest Hodges, Kätlin Peets (Event 2-058) Invited Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 8 Thursday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm Biography. Michael Chandler, Ph.D., is a developmental psychologist and Professor Emeritus with the Department of Psychology at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver. His research interests include socio-cognitive development, young people’s developing “theories-of-mind” and the cross-cultural study of the process of identity formation. He is deeply involved in the study of Canada’s Aboriginal youth, and how their struggles to achieve a sense of coherent personal and cultural identity impact on a range of health outcomes and other measures of socioemotional well-being. In particular, he has studied the phenomena of youth suicide as it manifests itself in Canada’s First Nations youth, and (internationally) among other indigenous groups. Dr. Chandler has published more than 150 books, articles, and book chapters, and has earned the Killam Memorial Senior Research Prize, the Killam Teaching Prize, and 2-058. Adolescent Development Among First Nations and American Indian Adolescents: Research and Policy Chair: Michael Chandler, Department of Psychology, University of British Columbia, Canada Presenters: Indigenous and Non-Indigenous Ways of Locating One's Self in Time Michael Chandler Cultural Models of Education in American Indians Stephanie Fryberg, Department of Psychology, University of Arizona LE,NONET: Supporting the Success of Aboriginal Post-Secondary Students Christopher Lalonde, Department of Psychology, University of Victoria, Canada Abstract. Everywhere one looks, a disproportionately small number of Indigenous youth enjoy any fair measure of educational success at any grade level. These unmet educational needs are so profound and so unconscionable as to be beyond all serious 37 appointment as a Peter Wall Institute Distinguished Scholar in Residence. His research and scholarly efforts have also led to his being named Canada's only Distinguished Investigator of both the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) and the Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research, and resulted in his being chosen as a member of the Advisory Board of CIHR’s Institute of Aboriginal Health. Gabrielle Lalonde, Mylène Henry, Anne Drouin-Germain, Pierre Nolin, Miriam Beauchamp (Event 2-059) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 9 Thursday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 2-059. Parenting, Gender, and Academic Outcomes in African American Adolescents Chair: Latisha Ross Discussant: Nancy E. Hill African American Girls’ Academic Outcomes: A Mixed-Method Exploration of Paternal Academic and Racial Socialization Charity Brown, Shauna Cooper Parental Academic Socialization, Gender, & Achievement Outcomes in African American Adolescents: A Cluster Analysis Latisha Ross, Stephanie Rowley Paternal and Maternal Contributions to Gender Differences in Academic Achievement among African American Adolescents Fatima Varner, Jelani Mandara Thursday, 3:30 pm - 5:00 pm (Event 2-060) Poster Session 4 Exhibit Hall B Thursday, 3:30 pm - 5:00 pm 1 2 3 Executive Function and Selective Inductive Reasoning in Late Adolescents John Coley, Stephanie Silveira, Christine Torressen 4 Gender and Situational Differences in the Social Goals of Early Adolescents When Providing Support to a Bullied Best Friend Amy Kaye, Cynthia Erdley 5 Effects of Father Involvement on Young Mothers’ Wellbeing Claudia Reyes, Christina Gee 6 Support or Developmental Hindrance? College Students’ and Parents’ Views of Parental Involvement in School-Related Matters Alan Reifman, Timothy Oblad 7 Project Ex: Planning Extra-curricular Activities during the Transition to High School Sheila Marshall, Susan Lollis, Richard Young, Lauree Tilton-Weaver, Jane Chipman, Kristen Goessling, Margo Nelson, Agnieszka Wozniak, Emily Kear, Jovita Vytasek 8 Adolescent Adjustment in the Context of Life Change: The Supportive Role of Parental Structure Provision Elizabeth Flamm, Wendy Grolnick, Shayl Griffith 9 Ghanaian teenagers’ relationships with parents and other adults: Reliability, validity, and associations with sexual behavior of four new scales Jeffrey Bingenheimer, Clement Ahiadeke, Elizabeth Asante 10 Adolescents’ Emotional Control in the Link Between Parent’s Criticism and Adolescents’ Behavior Problems in Homeless Families Amanda Wenzel, Angela Narayan, Amy Monn, Theresa Lafavor Methodological Considerations in the Study of the Cortisol/DHEA(S) Ratio in Adolescence Mary Saczawa, Julia Graber, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn 11 Nonresident African American Fathers’ Influences on Sons’ Subjective Norms about Sex William Rogers, Cleopatra Caldwell, E. Hill De Loney A Comparison of Traditional and Virtual Reality Assessment of Executive Functioning in Adolescents 38 12 Marital Conflict and Stress Physiology in Adolescence: The Roles of Age and Pubertal Status Rachel Lucas-Thompson, Faith Kwon, Maja Palmquist, Andie Zvonkovic, Kristina Vlahovicova 23 The Role of Belonging Needs During the Transition to College Justin Heinze 24 The social representation of citizenship in young adults: a qualitative research Daniela Marzana, Elena Marta 13 Parental Monitoring, Parenting Stress, and Dysfunctional Mother-Daughter Interactions in Adolescent Girls with and without ADHD Chanelle Gordon, Stephen Hinshaw 25 Development under stress: The culture of academic competition and adolescent friendship participation in Chinese school Xu Zhao 14 Sibling Relationship Experiences as Predictors of Romantic Relationship Experiences in Adolescence Susan Doughty, Susan McHale, Mark Feinberg 26 Feeling Poor, Being Poor: The Relationship Between Anxiety and Objective and Subjective SES Nicholas Graham, Patrick Rock, Jaana Juvonen 15 Neighborhood Structure and Adolescent Depressive Symptoms: The Moderating Role of Gender and Parental Education Sara Anderson, Tama Leventhal, Yibing Li, Alicia Doyle 27 Transitioning up to the Suburbs: African American Adolescents’ Acculturation Strategies, Adjustment, and Academic Well-being Revathy Kumar, Nancy Seay 16 Social Capital: Contributions of the Construct Validation on Chilean Youth Organizations Cristina Valenzuela 28 Types of Long-Term Life Aims Among Chinese and American College Students Fei Jiang, Fei Jiang, Jenni Mariano 29 Ethnic Racial Socialization: Protection or Risk Against Racial Discrimination Among Ethnic Minority Emerging Adults Lisa Liu, Anna Lau 17 Too Much of a Good Thing? Examining High School Extracurricular Participation, School Connectedness, and Academic Performance Casey Knifsend, Sandra Graham 30 Understanding Gender Socialization in International Contexts: Measuring Parent & Peer Gender Socialization for Indian Adolescents Taveeshi Gupta, Niobe Way 18 Promoting Motivation, Need Satisfaction, and Performance in Adolescent Athletes: Evidence of the Compensating Roles of Coaches Amélie Morinville, Patrick Gaudreau, Véronique Franche 31 Does Level of Autonomy Among Youth with Spina Bifida Buffer Against the Negative Effects of Neurocognitive Deficits on Medical Adherence? Lauren O'Hara, Grayson Holmbeck 19 How Does Maternal Age Affect Child’s Achievement Over Time? Role of Parenting Practices and Child IQ Vinetra King, Sylvie Mrug 32 Trajectories of Adolescent Implicit and Explicit Alcohol Attitudes and the Role of Parental Drinking Hector Lopez-Vergara, Craig Colder, Larry Hawk, William Wieczorek, Jennifer Read, Rina Eiden, Liliana Lengua 21 Change in Science Self-Efficacy of Male and Female Adolescents: Role of Gender and Classroom Context Lee Shumow, Jennifer Schmidt 22 The Roles of Emotional Intelligence, Adjustment to University, Parenting Style, and Problem Behaviors in Post-Secondary Academic Achievement Elizabeth Levin, Rashmi Garg 39 33 Initial Levels of Depression Predict Trajectories of Alcohol Consumption Across Middle Adolescence Ashley Richmond, Brett Laursen, Dawn DeLay, Shrija Dirghangi, Cody Hiatt, Daniel Dickson, Amy Hartl 43 The Relationship Between Adolescents’ Daily Hassles and Cyber Aggression: A Longitudinal Investigation Hailey Barr, Michelle Wright, Yan Li 44 Bullying Behavior and Problem-Solving Skills of Bystanders Across Overt, Relational and Cyber Bullying Situations Jenny Isaacs-Corr, Charles Borgen, Benjamin Glueck, Rona Novick 34 SCAB (Skin Color Altering Behaviors): An Investigation of both Skin-lightening and Skin-Darkening Behaviors among CollegeAged Women Mallory Dimler, Lance Swenson 35 What Predicts Eating Disorder Symptoms Among Latino Adolescents? Vera Lopez, Raquel Halfond, Rosalie Corona 45 How are Cyber Relational Victimization and Traditional Relational Victimization Associated with Depressive Symptoms in Adolescents? Lindsay Mathieson, Nicki Crick 36 Sexual Self-Efficacy of First-Year University Students According to Exposure to STD Knowledge and Actual Knowledge Brooke Masters, Carol Markstrom, Kristin Moilanen 46 Challenges in Interpersonal Relationships for Emerging Adults with Symptoms of ADHD Catherine Bagwell, Karen Kochel, Sarah Hall, Caroline Newcomb, Lyrica Fils-Aime 37 Parenting Practices, Deviant Peers, and the Onset of Sexual Intercourse in Three Ethnic Groups Lisa Crockett, Arielle Deutsch 47 Friendship Quality as a Moderator of Friend Influence on Relational and Overt Aggression Diana Meter, Deborah Casper, Noel Card 38 The Effects of the Sleep-Smart Program on Early Adolescents’ Sleep Hygiene, Behavioral Well-Being, and Perceived Competence Amy Wolfson, Michaela Johnson, Elizabeth Harkins, Christine Marco, Alison Ludden 48 Adolescents’ Envy over Attractiveness with the Opposite Sex: Intra- and Inter-Personal Correlates and Consequences Jeffrey Parker, Jessica McGuire 49 Ecological Factors Contributing to Mothers’ and Youth’s Perceptions of Aggression Claire Oxtoby, John Grych 39 Stress Buffering Effects of Religiosity on Adolescents’ Substance Use Jungmeen Kim-Spoon, Gregory Longo, Julee Farley 50 Strategic Presentation of Academic Performance and Effort in Middle School: Links to Gender and Social Goals Joan Zook, Elizabeth Thorp, Peter Kearns 40 Peer Alcohol Use, Autonomy From Friends, and Social Anxiety Among First Semester College Students: A Latent Profile Analysis JeeWon Cheong, Christine Walther 51 Peer Influence on Risky Decision-Making: The Role of Pubertal Status Natalie Kretsch, Rachel Polk, Kathryn Harden, Laurence Steinberg 41 Childhood Bullying and Social Dilemmas Amelia Kohm 53 Individual Factors Associated with Fifth Graders’ Desire for Same- Versus OtherSex Interactions Cindy Miller, Karen Kochel, Kimberly Updegraff, Carol Martin, Richard Fabes, Laura Hanish 42 Examining the Links Between School Climate and Student’s Experiences With Bullying Jessica Trach, Matthew Lee, Reky Groendal, Shelley Hymel, David Smith 40 54 Acculturative Stress and Prosocial Behaviors: Gender Differences in the Mediating Roles of Psychological Control, Familism, and Emotion Regulation Alexandra Davis, Deanna Opal, Gustavo Carlo, Cara Streit, Seth Schwartz, Byron Zamboanga, Adriana Umaña-Taylor, Su Yeong Kim 63 The Role of Private Regard and Religious Involvement in the Relationship Between Discrimination and Well-Being Daniel Lee, Enrique Neblett 64 Coping strategies among urban African American adolescents: An examination of the differential impact of stressors and gender Cynthia Pierre, Noni Gaylord-Harden 55 Links between Romantic Relationships and Same-Sex Friendships during Middle Adolescence Stephanie Bovis, Melissa Menzer, Kenneth Rubin 65 Identifying developmentally atypical and non-linear trends in depressive symptoms: A finite mixture analysis Brian Baucom, Lauren Spies, Gayla Margolin 56 Romantic events, sexual behaviors, and psychological outcomes among female adolescents of Mexican origin. Graciela Espinosa-Hernandez, Sara Vasilenko, Mayra Bamaca-Colbert 66 Contextual Variables Associated with Psychosocial Adjustment of Adolescents Débora Dell'Aglio, Juliana Sbicigo 67 An Evaluation of a Participatory Action Research Based Intervention With Homeless Youth Pushpanjali Dashora 57 With a Little Help From a Friend Social Anxiety Relates to Increased CoRumination: Social Support as a Suppressor Variable Ethan Rothstein, Jennifer Sauve, Hannah Ford, Jessica Fales, Doug Nangle 68 Participant Roles in Aggression: Analysis of the Relational Aggression Participant Role Scale With Confirmatory Factor Analysis Deborah Casper, Russell Toomey, Noel Card 58 Targeting Anxiety in Adolescents with CoOccurring Depression and Anxiety Michal Rischall, Jason Washburn, Leah Welty, Mark Reinecke 69 Individual Conscience and Expected Social Condemnation: A Morality of Violence Eric Chen, Misaki Natsuaki, Nancy Guerra 59 Cognitive Style for Stressors Predicts Subsequent Rumination: Event-Specific Evidence from a Prospective Study Among Adolescents Marissa Rudolph, Amy Mezulis 70 Security of Attachment, Self-Perception and Social Functioning Peer-Group Functioning in Portuguese Early Adolescents António Santos, João Correia, Miguel Freitas, Manuela Veríssimo, Kenneth Rubin 60 Proposing a Path from Self-Esteem to Depression During the Transition to College Catherine Lee, Daniel Dickson, Elizabeth Pope, Colleen Conley 71 Adolescent Peer Socialization: An Examination of Gender as a Moderator on Risk Differences Theresa Pearson, Bonnie Klimes-Dougan, Paul Hastings, Melissa Simard 61 The Moderating Role of Friendship Support on Exposure to Community Violence and Internalizing Symptoms Gina Veits, Carolyn Tompsett 72 An Exploration of Bidirectional Associations Between Self-Regulation and Parenting in Early Adolescence Katie Rasmussen, Kristin Moilanen, Laura Padilla-Walker 62 Change and Correlates of Symptoms of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Adolescents one Year After the 2008 Wenchuan Earthquake Yanyun Qin, Fulei Geng, Yuhong Zheng, Fang Fan, Lan Zhang 41 73 Personality Extremity: Stability and Relations to Internalizing and Externalizing Problems in Adolescence Alithe van den Akker, Maja Dekovic, Peter Prinzie, Jessica Asscher, Amaranta de Haan Keryn Pasch, Jessica Cance, Cheryl Perry, Kelli Komro 84 Sexy vs. traditional: The price of using a sexy Facebook profile photo Elizabeth Daniels, Eileen Zurbriggen 74 College Student Identity Development and Its Relationship to Moral Identity Jessica Urban, Tonia Bock Thursday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 75 Agree to Disagree? The Role of Agreeableness and Social Self-Efficacy as Predictors of Negative Conflict Resolution Strategies Ryan Field, Marla Reese-Weber, Renee Tobin, Rebecca Denney, Michael Nigro (Event 2-061) Paper Discussion Symposium East Ballroom Salon A Thursday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 2-061. Media Effects, the Untold Story: Examining Effects in Understudied Genres and Populations 76 Increasing Sensitivity to Reputation during Adolescence: Developmental Perspectives on Fairness, Punishment and Compensation Geert-Jan Will, Berna Guroglu, Wouter van den Bos, Eveline Crone Chair: Janna Kim New Media, New Avenues of Risk: Sexy Social Media, Reality TV, and Risky Alcohol and Sexual Behaviors Janna Kim Beyond the Screen: Linking Varied Forms of Media Use to Adolescents’ Gender and Sexual Attitudes L. Monique Ward, Corissa Carlson, Lauren Reed, Jennifer Johnson Associations between Media Use and Sexual Attitudes among Asian American Adolescents Sarah Trinh, L. Monique Ward “I Want Your Sex”: Music, Masculinity, and Sexual Behavior among Rural Adolescents Andrew Smiler, Brittany Hearon 77 Impulse Control and Disinhibition: Examining Age Differences and Forms of Aggression in Justice-Involved Youths Jennifer Beneteau, Jodi Viljoen, Stephanie Fowler 78 Adolescent and parent perceptions of religious norms Natalie Johnson, Sam Hardy, Ryan Woodbury, David Rackham, David Dollahite 79 Domain-General Identity Distress as a Predictor of Domain-Specific Career Identity Kristine Anthis 80 Relationship Quality Predicts Identity Commitment and Distress Samantha Hague, Janet Gebelt 81 Daily Racial Microaggressions and Ethnic Identification among Native American Late Adolescents and Young Adults Merrill Jones, Renee Galliher 82 Mental Health and Sexual Experiences Among LGB and Heterosexual Youth Seeking Services Arnold Grossman, John Frank, Michael McCutcheon, Marty Cooper 83 Direct and Indirect Effects of Alcohol Marketing on Early Adolescent Alcohol Use Behaviors 42 (Event 2-062) Paper Discussion Symposium East Ballroom Salon C Thursday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm (Event 2-064) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 10 Thursday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 2-062. Racial Identity and Mental Health: An In-Depth Exploration of Mediating and Moderating Processes 2-064. Adolescents, Economic Hardship, and the Worldwide “Great Recession” Chair: Noelle M. Hurd Racial Identity and Mental Health Among African American Emerging Adults: The Moderating Effects of Neighborhood Racial Composition Noelle Hurd, Courtney Cogburn, Sheretta Butler-Barnes, Robert Sellers, Marc Zimmerman The Mediating Role of Racial Identity in the Association Between Racial Socialization and Psychological Adjustment Enrique Neblett The Moderating Role of Racial Identity on the Relationship Between Race-Related Stressors and Psychological Well-Being Sabine French Chair: Jeylan T. Mortimer Discussant: Walter Heinz Adolescent Adaptation during the Great Recession Jeremy Staff, John Schulenberg, Monica Johnson, Megan Patrick Childhood Poverty and Trajectories of Transition to Adulthood in Germany Olaf Groh-Samberg Intergenerational Transmission of Worklessness: Coming of Age during the Current Great Recession Ingrid Schoon, Matt Barnes, Anna Vignoles (Event 2-065) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 11 Thursday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm (Event 2-063) Roundtable East Meeting 1 Thursday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 2-065. Gene-Environment Interactions in the Development of Adolescent Psychopathology 2-063. Linking Research with the Practice of Youth Development Chair: Roy Otten Discussant: Mara Brendgen Interaction Between BDNF and Peer Antisocial Behavior Predicts Later Aggressive and Nonaggressive Behavior Tina Kretschmer, Edward Barker Best Friends and Dual Growth of Adolescent Smoking and Drinking: the Role of the OPRM1 Gene Marloes Kleinjan, Evelien Poelen, Rutger Engels, Maaike Verhagen Testing Bidirectional Effects between Cannabis Use and Depressive Symptoms: Moderation by the Serotonin Transporter Gene Roy Otten, Rutger Engels Moderator: Stephen F. Hamilton Panelists: Reed Larson, David DuBois, Nicole Yohalem, Mary Hamilton 43 (Event 2-066) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 12 Thursday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 2-066. From Prevention to Intervention: Implementation Insights from Three Child Welfare Programs A Longitudinal Model of Family Stressors and Young Adult Substance Use: Race differences and HPA regulation Kevin Haggerty, Martie Skinner, Richard Catalano (Event 2-068) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 14 Thursday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm Chair: Lyscha Marcynyszyn Discussant: Gabriel P. Kuperminc An Evaluation of an Intensive Family Engagement Program: Service Needs of Child Welfare Involved Families with Adolescents Lyscha Marcynyszyn, Erin Maher, Jennifer Uldricks The Multi-Site Accelerated Permanency Project: Helping Older Adolescents in Foster Care Achieve Permanency Catherine White, Kirk O'Brien, Karen Tao, Paul DiLorenzo, Susan Kelly, Linda Morgan Exploring the Relationship Between Service Provision and Education and Employment Outcomes for Adolescents Leaving Foster Care Mei Ling Ellis, Kirk O'Brien 2-068. Considering Cultural and Ethnic Processes in Organized Activity Participation of Adolescents: International and National Perspectives Chair: Lynne M. Borden Discussant: Nickki P. Dawes Patterns of out-of-school time use around the world: Do they help to explain international differences in achievement? Joseph Mahoney, Andrea Vest How Do Siblings Influence Mexican-origin Youths’ Activity Participation?: Examining Sibling Roles and Cultural Orientation. Chara Price, Sandi Simpkins, Sheree Taraba Breaking Down Potential Barriers to Continued Program Participation Joyce Serido, Christine Bracamonte Wiggs, Lynne Borden (Event 2-067) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 13 Thursday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 2-067. Diverse Developmental Stressors & Individual Biological Differences: Influences on the Severity & Frequency of Substance Use In Adolescence & Young Adulthood (Event 2-069) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 15 Thursday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 2-069. How social reasoning and messages relate to adolescents’ attitudes about homosexuality and the treatment of gay and lesbian people Chair: Linnea R. Burk How the Interaction of Individual and Context Factors Differentially Influence Trajectories of Adolescent Per-Occasion Alcohol Use Linnea Burk, Paula Ruttle, Jeffrey Armstrong, Marilyn Essex Multiple Pathways to Adolescent Alcohol Problems: Direct and Indirect Effects of Biobehavioral Markers of Emotional Dysregulation Katherine Kivisto, Deborah Welsh, Christi Culpepper, Debora Baldwin, Sarah Fischer Chair: Monica Foust Discussant: Stephen T. Russell Teach your children well: Exploring the link between communication about homosexuality and attitudes toward gays and lesbians Monica Foust, L. Monique Ward (continued) 44 Adolescents’ reasoning about discrimination based on sexual orientation: Does group context make a difference? Stacey Horn, Paul Poteat, Alyssa Ponte, Mary Beth Medvide Condoning Discrimination: Effects of Ideological Beliefs are Moderated by Moral Reasoning Paul Poteat, Stacey Horn, Alyssa Ponte, Mary Beth Medvide (Event 2-070) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 17 Thursday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 2-070. Swimming Against the Tide: When Adolescents Challenge Family and Peer Norms Chair: Myriam Villalobos Parents' and Adolescents' Beliefs about Parents’ Right to Know about Adolescent’s Activities as Predictors of Adolescent Disclosure Judi Smetana, Wendy Rote Early Adolescent’s Acceptance and Understanding of Parenting Rules: Nurturance, Self-Determination and Fairness Maykel Verkuyten, Maike Gieling, Jochem Thijs Challenging Group Identity Preference: When Equality Trumps Ingroup Bias Melanie Killen Social Reasoning and Emotion Attributions about Exclusion of Disabled Children Tina Malti, Luciano Gasser contextual transitions in middle school: The WITS LEADS Program Bonnie Leadbeater, Rachel Yeung Thompson, Paweena Sukhawathanakul, Emilie Gladstone An Ecological Approach to Moderators of Middle School Violence Prevention Effects Patrick Tolan, David Henry Young Women Leaders: Outcomes of a Group and One-on-One Mentoring Intervention for Girls Nancy Deutsch, Joanna Lee Williams, Angela Henneberger, Edith Lawrence, Valerie Futch Sustaining Positive Developmental Trajectories of Rural African American Males from Middle Childhood to Late Adolescence through the Strong African American Families Program Velma Murry, Cady Berkel, Yufei Chen, Ronald Simons (Event 2-072) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 19 Thursday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 2-072. A Public Health Perspective on Risk and Protective Factors and Suicidal Behavior Chairs: Sarah Bacon, Melissa K. Holt The Relationship Between Multiple Types of Victimization and Suicidal Behavior: Evidence from the YRBS Sarah Beth Barnett, Xiangming Fang Sexual Minority Youths, Risk behaviors, and Suicide Ideation and Attempts Deborah Stone, Feijun Luo Bullying and Suicide Risk: A Systematic Meta-Analysis Melissa Holt, Alana Vivolo, Sarah DeGue, Kristin Holland, Briana Lozano, Jennifer Matjasko, Misty Wolfe The Intersectionality of Risk and Protective Factors for Adolescent Suicide and Youth Violence: The Case for Crossover Prevention Sarah Bacon (Event 2-071) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 18 Thursday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 2-071. Early Adolescence: Developmental Opportunity for Prevention of Social and Behavior Problems Chair: Michael Schoeny Matching the prevention of interpersonal aggression to critical developmental and 45 (Event 2-073) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 2 Thursday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm (Event 2-075) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 7 Thursday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 2-073. Training Reasoning in Adolescents - New Hope for Higher Order Thinking Skills 2-075. Methodological Issues in Sociometric Research Chair: Antonius H. Cillessen An Analysis of the Differences Between Using Limited Versus Unlimited Peer Nominations of Victimization Among Colombian Early Adolescents Jonathan Santo, Shari Mayman, Luz-Stella Lopez, William Bukowski Equivalence of Computerized and Standard Sociometric Data Collection Yvonne van den Berg, Antonius Cillessen Participation Rate and Internal Reliability of Peer Nomination Measures Peter Marks, Ben Babcock, Antonius Cillessen, Nicki Crick Discussants: Jacquelyn F. Gamino, Michael A. Motes Higher Order Cognitive Training in Public Middle School Students Jacquelyn Gamino Training Students with ADHD How to Learn and Use Higher Order Thinking Skills Russell Riddle, Jacquelyn Gamino Brain Changes in Adolescents after Cognitive Training Michael Motes, Jacquelyn Gamino (Event 2-074) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 3 Thursday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm (Event 2-076) Invited Roundtable East Meeting 8 Thursday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 2-074. The Role of Personal Resources and Parental Support in Emerging Adults' Work Competence 2-076. The WEIRD (Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, Democratic) Side of the Study of Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood Chairs: Michael W. Pratt, Shmuel Shulman The Effects of Adolescent Relationships and School Engagement on Early Adult Work Competence. Michelle Englund, Sally Kuo Precursors of an Integrated Occupational Identity during Emerging adulthood Tamuz Barr, Shmuel Shulman, Yaara Livneh, Jari-Erik Nurmi, Kati Vasalampi Unaligned Ambitions: Predicting a Problematic Transition into Adulthood Barbara Schneider Caring about Work: A Longitudinal Analysis of Adolescent Personality Predictors of Young Adult Work Engagement Michael Pratt, Joan Norris, Susan Alisat Moderator: Jeffrey J. Arnett, Department of Psychology, Clark University Panelists: Steven Heine, Social and Cultural Psychology, University of British Columbia; Heidi Keller, Psychology, University of Osnabrueck, Germany; Robert Serpell, Psychology, University of Zambia Abstract. Less than 5% of the world's population lives in the United States, yet adolescent psychology is dominated by American research. Often this research is assumed to apply to the other 95% of the world, a dubious assumption at best. In this Roundtable, participants will address questions such as: How did adolescent psychology become largely an American field? What consequences does this dominance have for the progress of the field? What are some notable ways that the lives of adolescents differ around the world? What can and should be done to promote a more international, culturallybased understanding of adolescence? 46 University of Maryland Baltimore County, USA (19892001), and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Zambia (2003-2006), he was Convenor of the first international meeting in Africa of the International Society for the Study of Behavioral Development (ISSBD) in 2010. His publications include contributions to a wide range of scholarly journals and edited volumes, and four books, Culture’s Influence on Behavior (1976), Mobilizing Local Resources in Africa for Persons With Learning Difficulties or Mental Handicap (1984), The Significance of Schooling: LifeJourneys in an African Society (1993), and Becoming Literate in the City: the Baltimore Early Childhood Project (2005). His primary interests are in cultural aspects of human development, intelligence, multilingualism, literacy, assessment, and services for children with disabilities and their families, and educational curriculum development, with special attention to cultural context, and to the region of sub-Saharan Africa. Biography. Steven J. Heine is Professor of Social and Cultural Psychology at the University of British Columbia. After receiving his Ph.D. from the University of British Columbia in 1996, he had visiting positions at Kyoto University and Tokyo University and was on the faculty at the University of Pennsylvania. His research targets questions regarding genetic essentialism, meaning maintenance, and identifying what is universal and what is culturallyvariable in a variety of psychological processes—most particularly self-enhancing motivations. He has published over sixty journal articles which have appeared in such outlets as Science, Nature, Behavioral and Brain Sciences, and Psychological Review, and is the author of the textbook Cultural Psychology. He received the Distinguished Scientist Early Career Award for Social Psychology from the American Psychological Association in 2003 and the Career Trajectory Award from the Society of Experimental Social Psychology in 2011. He lives with his family in Vancouver. Biography. Heidi Keller is Professor of Psychology at the University of Osnabrueck, Germany, and Director of the Research Unit for "Culture, Learning and Development" of the Lower Saxoninan Institute of Early Childhood Education and Development. Dr. Keller is directing a multicultural, longitudinal research program on "Cultural Solutions of Universal Developmental Tasks." Theoretically, she is interested in making developmental psychology both a biologically and culturally informed science. Dr. Keller has been awarded the Nehru Chair Professorship at the MS University of Baroda. She has taught at the MS University of Baroda, the University of Costa Rica in San Jose, and the University of California in Los Angeles. Dr. Keller has also served as President of the International Association for Cross-Cultural Psychology. (Event 2-077) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 9 Thursday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 2-077. Contextual Resources and the Transition to Middle School Chair: Jacquelyn Raftery Discussant: Jacquelynne Eccles Ethnic Socialization, Ethnic Identity, and Mexican-origin Adolescents’ Adjustment: Moderation by School Ethnic Composition Adriana Umaña-Taylor, Megan O'Donnell, George Knight, Mark Roosa, Cady Berkel, Rajni Nair The Transition to Middle school: A Longitudinal Study of Parenting, Coping, and Motivational Resources Jacquelyn Raftery, Wendy Grolnick Situated Reading Motivations as Mediators Between Perceptions of Reading Instruction and General Reading Motivations in Two Instructional Interventions Amanda Mason-Singh, Allan Wigfield Biography. Robert Serpell is a researcher, teacher, and writer, who has spent most of his adult life in Africa. He is Professor of Psychology at the University of Zambia and Coordinator of the Centre for the Promotion of Literacy in Sub-Saharan Africa. Formerly Director of the Institute for African Studies in Lusaka (1977-83), Director of the Graduate program in Applied Developmental Psychology at the 47 Thursday, 5:30 pm - 7:45 pm A special performance by The Coastal Sound Youth Choir, Carrie Tennant, director, George Chung, accompanist, will be presented. The Coastal Sound Youth Choir is fast becoming well known across British Columbia for their creative and unique approach to choral music. Using creative staging, movement, and multimedia, the Coastal Sound Youth Choir crafts performances that have been described as “soul-elevating,” “truly imaginative,” and “vibrating with life.” Extremely enthusiastic and very energetic, this close-knit group of teenagers and young adults maintains a busy performance schedule. Along with yearly retreats and concert tours, the choir also enjoys spending social time together at informal gatherings and events. In 2010 and 2011, the Coastal Sound Youth Choir shared the stage with renowned vocal groups The Nylons, musica intima, The Shirleys and The Good Noise Gospel Choir, and recorded a song with Nikki Yanofsky. This past spring, the choir was selected as a finalist in the National Competition for Amateur Choirs, and chosen as the “most outstanding choir” at the BC Festival of the Performing Arts. Last July, the youth choir co-hosted the Coastal Sound International Choral Festival, where hundreds of singers came together from around the world for a week of performance and sharing. (Event 2-078) Reception Exhibit Hall A Thursday, 5:30 pm - 7:45 pm 2-078. Welcome & Awards Ceremony & Global Reception Speaker: Niobe Way, SRA President All attendees are invited to attend this event! Honor SRA 2012 Award recipients and enjoy refreshments. Here’s an opportunity to reconnect with old friends and former colleagues and meet people from other universities or countries who may share your research interests. Cash bars will be available. 48 FRIDAY Friday, 8:30 am - 10:00 am Ape (2005, Riverhead) and The Age of Empathy (2009, Harmony). De Waal is C. H. Candler Professor in the Psychology Department of Emory University and Director of the Living Links Center at the Yerkes National Primate Center, in Atlanta, Georgia. He has been elected to the National Academy of Sciences (US), the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the Royal Dutch Academy of Sciences. In 2007, he was selected by Time as one of The Worlds’ 100 Most Influential People Today, and in 2011 by Discover as among 47 (all time) Great Minds of Science. (Event 3-001) Invited Keynote Address East Ballroom Salon B Friday, 8:30 am - 10:00 am 3-001. Our Inner Ape: What Primate Behavior Tells Us About Human Nature Chair: Lene Arnett Jensen, Department of Psychology, Clark University Speaker: Frans de Waal, Director, Living Links Center, Yerkes National Primate Center Abstract. When people do evil things, such as when they commit genocides in Bosnia or Rwanda, we call them “animals.” If people act altruistically, such as when they save another’s life or give to the poor, we attribute this to our noble human morality. We call them “humane.” Both sides of human nature, however, are tied to our biology. This theme of the duality of human nature, hovering between beast and angel, is brought home in Our Inner Ape by looking at our two closest primate relatives, the chimpanzee and the bonobo. The chimpanzee has a reputation as murderous and power-hungry, whereas the bonobo, the hippie of the primate world, prefers to “make love - not war.” Both apes are equally close to us, and we humans have a bit of both. In this lecture I will go over themes of cooperation and empathy as studied in monkeys and apes, but also touch on tendencies such as striving for dominance, sexual competition, and conflict resolution that seem to me particularly relevant to understand adolescent life. (Event 3-002) Roundtable East Meeting 1 Friday, 8:30 am - 10:00 am 3-002. Teaching About Adolescence: Similarities and Differences Across Disciplines and Audiences Moderator: Brandy A. Randall Panelists: Sarah Kiefer, Robert Weisskirch, Molly Secor-Turner, Rachelle Vettern (Event 3-003) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 10 Friday, 8:30 am - 10:00 am 3-003. Mediators and Moderators of Exposure to Community Violence Biography. Dr. Frans B. M. de Waal is a Dutch/American biologist and primatologist known for his work on the behavior and social intelligence of primates. His first book, Chimpanzee Politics (1982) compared the schmoozing and scheming of chimpanzees involved in power struggles with that of human politicians. Ever since, de Waal has drawn parallels between primate and human behavior, from peacemaking and morality to culture. His scientific work has been published in hundreds of technical articles in journals such as Science, Nature, Scientific American, and outlets specialized in animal behavior. His popular books—translated into fifteen languages—have made him one of the world's most visible primatologists. His latest books are Our Inner Chair: Maryse Richards Discussant: Cheryl Boyce Urban Adolescents and Violence Exposure: Perils and Prospects to Predict Future Violence Sarah Stoddard, Marc Zimmerman, Daniel Choe Exposure to Community Violence and Social Adjustment Among Urban African American Youth: The Mediating Role of Emotion Regulation Devin Carey, Maryse Richards Prospective Linkages Among Violence Exposure, Erratic Sleep Patterns, and Academic Achievement in Middle School Youth Wendy Kliewer, Stephen Lepore 49 (Event 3-004) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 13 Friday, 8:30 am - 10:00 am Friday, 10:00 am - 11:30 am (Event 3-006) Poster Session 5 Exhibit Hall B Friday, 10:00 am - 11:30 am 3-004. Peers, Parents, and “Others”: Sources and Outcomes of Social Support in Adolescence Chair: Nancy L. Deutsch Discussant: Patrick H. Tolan First Line Social Support in Adolescence Peter Lovegrove, Nancy Deutsch, Angela Henneberger, Valerie Futch Physical and Relational Aggression in Adolescent Girls: Testing a Confluence Approach Angela Henneberger, Kate Keenan, Patrick Tolan, Alison Hipwell Social Network Characteristics and Delinquency in a sample Urban Minority Males Followed from Early Adolescence to Young Adulthood Deborah Gorman-Smith, David Henry, Patrick Tolan, Michael Schoeny (Event 3-005) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 15 Friday, 8:30 am - 10:00 am 3-005. Mom! Dad! Give Me a Break! Parental Psychological Control and Adjustment in Different Cultures: The Role of Mediating Variables Chair: Miri Scharf Personal Efficacy as a Mediator of the Effects of Maternal Psychological Control and Responsiveness on Adolescents' Wellbeing Patricio Cumsille, M Loreto Martinez Psychological control and the development of internalizing and externalizing problems: Psychological reactance as an explaining variable? Stijn Van Petegem, Wim Beyers, Bart Soenens, Maarten Vansteenkiste Parental psychological control and adolescents' adjustment: the mediating role of reactance and self esteem in an Israeli sample Miri Scharf, Ofra Mayseless 50 1 Normative development of the basal ganglia, amygdala and hippocampus from early to mid adolescence: a longitudinal MRI investigation Meg Dennison, Sarah Whittle, Murat Yücel, Nicholas Allen 2 The Impact of Executive Functioning on Smoking in Adolescence: the TRAILS Study. Zeena Harakeh, Leo De Sonneville, Regina van den Eijnden, Anja Huizink, Sijmen Reijneveld, Johan Ormel, Frank Verhulst, Karin Monshouwer, Wilma Vollebergh 3 Using the Right Words for Reasoning: Relationships Between Specific Word use and Inductive Reasoning Lyndon Forrester, Teomara Rutherford, Michael Martinez 4 Relationship between Aggression and Cognitive Distortion Meghann Kelly, John Lochman 5 The Association Between Minority Adolescent Mothers’ and Their Babies’ Fathers’ Relationship Quality, Co-parenting, and Father Involvement Sun Young Hwang, Christina Gee 6 Navigating Family Relationships During the Transition to Adulthood Among Former System Youth Bethany Lee, Michelle Munson 7 Determinants of Harsh Parenting in Mexican American Families Larry Dumka, Nancy Gonzales, Michaeline Jensen, Roger Millsap 8 The Role of Stability and Change in Asian Values on Adolescent Responses in ParentAdolescent Disagreement in VietnameseAmerican Families Nancy Trinh, Catherine Cooper 9 Family Value Discrepancies Within Salvadoran Immigrant Parent-Adolescent Dyads Joanna Wu, Ayfer Dost Gözkan, Lene Arnett Jensen 19 Academic Achievement in the Transition from Middle School to High School and Aspirations among Latino Adolescents Yolanda Vasquez, Jose Alvarez, Bryan Montana, Gabriela Chavira 10 The effect of the parent-child relationship and negative life events on the adolescent’s development of mastery Allison Flittner, Brenda Lohman, Janet Melby 20 Treading Water in Emerging Adulthood: The Results of Dropping Out of College Caitlin Faas, Amanda Griffin, Mark Benson 21 Motivational Resilience During Middle School: A Developmentally-Calibrated Model of Predictors of Academic Engagement Heather Brule, Ellen Skinner 11 The Influence of Dad: An Investigation of Female Adolescents' Perceived Closeness with Fathers, Impulsivity, and Risky Behaviors Whitney Rostad, Paul Silverman 22 Need for Relatedness Among White College Students and College Students of Color: Links to Academic Achievement Raquel Melendez, Stephanie Madsen 12 He’s my Baby too: Co-parenting Experiences of Nonresident and Resident African American Fathers Otima Doyle, Erikka Dzirasa, Monique Fontes, Antoinette Burris, David Goldston 23 Don’t Shy Away: An Examination of the Role of Athletic Involvement in the Transition to University for Shy, First-Year Students Kate Hill, Jessie Moorman, Anne Bowker 13 Let’s Talk About Sex: Adolescent Disclosure to Mothers about Sexual Behavior and Other Domain-Specific Activities Josephine Kearney, Kay Bussey 24 Do Community-Level Assets and Risks Relate to Youth Civic Engagement? A Study of Social Capital Laura Wray-Lake, Julia Tang, Lin Lin 14 Sibling Relationships in Adolescents With Orthopedic Conditions Elizabeth Rusnak, Nina Mounts, Kathy Zebracki, Jeffrey Ackman 25 Identity Integration and Family Ethnic Socialization as Moderators of Acculturation Stress and Psychological Outcomes Samantha Johansen, Thao Le 15 Timing of Exposure to Neighborhood Socioeconomic Conditions: Implications for Children’s and Adolescents’ Achievement and Mental Health Kristina Schmid, Tama Leventhal 26 “Gates You Don’t Realize Have Been Opened for You”: Affluent Teen Girls’ PostIntervention Discourses of Privilege and Inequality Beth Benjamin 16 Adolescent After-School Self-Care Relates to Later Adjustment and Identity Development Diane Putnick, Marc Bornstein, Charlene Hendricks 27 A Meta-Analysis of the Association Between Acculturation and Substance Use Among Hispanic American Youth Martha Zapata Roblyer, Ronald Cox, Robert Larzelere 17 Mexican-Origin Youth Participation in Extracurricular Activities: Predictive Variables and Trajectories of Involvement Nickki Dawes, Kathryn Modecki, Nancy Gonzales 28 Latino Adolescents’ Perceptions of Their Culture Maria Iturbide, Sandra Potter 18 The Influence of Sports Participation and Peer Values on Adolescent Developmental Outcomes Carl Sorensen, Nicole Zarrett 29 The Psychophysiological Effects of Racism on African American Late Adolescents Ashly Gaskin, Enrique Neblett 51 30 The role of community college settings in the conceptualizations of adulthood: A qualitative analysis of immigrant emerging adults Dalal Katsiaficas, Sandra Dias, Carola Suarez-Orozco 40 Substance Use and Risky Sexual Behavior in Sexual Minority Youth Sanne Wortel, Mandi Burnette, Assaf Oshri 41 Sixth Graders' Reasoning About Coping With Peer Victimization Wei-Ting Chen, Amy Bellmore 31 Growth Trajectories of Health Behaviours: Transition from Adolescence to Adulthood Nora Wiium, Kyrre Breivik 42 Real-Life Experiences of Sixth Graders’ Responses upon Witnessing Peer Victimization in School Ting-Lan Ma, Amy Bellmore 32 Dueling Dual Processes: Implicit and Explicit Decision Making Processes Associated with Drinking Behavior in Adolescents Sarah Welton 43 Examining the Relationship Between Technology Use and Technology Skill Level in the Prediction of Electronic Victimization Heather Giles, Juan Casas, Alicia Bower, Joseph LaVoie 33 Emotional Dysregulation, Coping, and Readiness to Change in Adolescent and Young Adult Substance Users Sarah Welton, David Stewart, Alisa Burpee, Brittany Hall, Kelly Serafini 44 Physical Fights and Audience Behavior: The Influence of Peers Tabitha Wurster, Molly Dawes, Amelia Hock, Hongling Xie 34 Trajectories of Alcohol-Related Risky Driving in Adolescence and Young Adulthood Tracy Desjardins, Paweena Sukhawathanakul, Jacqueline Homel, Vincenza Gruppuso, Bonnie Leadbeater 45 Risk factors for adolescent dating violence: A systematic literature review Naomi Knoble, Deborah Capaldi, Joann Shortt, Hyoun Kim 46 Offline and Online Friendship Experiences among College Students: Associations with Psychological and Academic Adjustment Julie Kingery, Bernadette Wormuth, Melissa Gray, Kelly Peneston, Tyson Reuter, Cynthia Erdley 36 Predictors of White and Hispanic College Students’ Health Protective Sexual Communication Prior to Intercourse Michelle Toews, Ani Yazedjian, Melissa Delgado 47 The Relation of Hometown and College Friendship Experiences to College Adjustment Patricia Dieter, Melissa Hord, Elizabeth Baroni, Cynthia Erdley 37 The Relationship Between Early Sexual Debut and Parenting Behaviors of Dutch Adolescents Ellen Reitz, Daphne van de Bongardt, Maja Dekovic 38 "It's 10 PM": Parental Monitoring Moderates the Association between Sleep and Risktaking Erika Bagley, Vonnie McLoyd, Martha Cox 48 Gender Differences in the Association Between Friendship Termination and Loneliness Among Adolescents Laura Guthridge, Julie MacEvoy, Calli Kosch, Lena Kim, Stephanie Bartell 39 Moderators of Peer Influence on Future Substance Use in Early Adolescence Shawn Marschall-Lévesque, Natalie Castellanos Ryan, Frank Vitaro, Sophie Parent, Richard E. Tremblay, Jean R. Séguin 49 Interpersonal Relationships during Adolescence: Coworry and its Relation to Corumination and Internalizing Distress Caitlin Dombrowski, Kathleen Herzig, Kimberli Treadwell 52 50 The Association between the Need to Belong and Relational Aggression: The Moderating Role of Rejection Kristina Lafferty, Nicole Lafko, Dianna Murray-Close Lesley Johnson, John Graham, Mark Greenberg 61 Interpersonal Indicators of Black Adolescent Psychopathology Christopher Merchant 51 Delinquent Behavior and Social Network Position in Early Adolescence Naomi Andrews, Olga Kornienko, Carlos Santos, Laura Hanish 62 Chronic Family Economic Hardship, Family Processes and Progression of Physical and Mental Health Problems in Adolescent Years Tae Kyoung Lee, Kas Wickrama, Frederick Lorenz, Rand Conger 52 Exploring the Social Context of Participation in Advanced Coursework: An Analysis of Social Networks Carolyn Barber, Jillian Woodford 63 Relative Contributions of Neuroticism and Friendship Quality to Subjective Well-Being in Adolescence Areana Eivers, Tracy Ludlow 53 Is Well-Being Linked to the Hierarchical Organization of Peer Groups in Late Childhood and Early Adolescence? Lisa Boyko, Eugene Ji, Megan Kinal, Lynne Zarbatany, Wendy Ellis, Xinyin Chen 64 Measuring Depressive Symptoms in a Longitudinal Study: What to do with an Aging Youth Sample Sarah Beal, Abbigail Tissot, Lorah Dorn, Stephanie Pabst 54 Adolescent reports of peer bullying and observations of romantic relationship quality Wendy Ellis 65 Development of Internalizing and Externalizing Problems in Adolescence: The Role of Parental Rejection. Jelle Sijtsema, Johan Ormel, Rene Veenstra, Tineke Oldehinkel 55 Sexual Self-Concept, Romantic Attachment, and Romantic Relationship Functioning Erin Mason, Brittany Kohlberger, Valerie Simon 66 Adolescent Outcomes of the Better Beginnings, Better Futures Project, a Community-Based Prevention Program for Children and Youth Mark Pancer, Ray Peters, Geoffrey Nelson, Colleen Loomis 56 I Think I’m OK, Why Don’t You?: The Saga of Disagreeable Youth Christopher Hafen, Megan Schad, Elenda Hessel, Joseph Allen 57 My Friends’ Relationships: Understanding Adolescent Responses to Friends’ Experiences of Dating Violence Laura Guthridge, Julie MacEvoy 67 Profiles of Mentoring Relationships: Associations with Mentor/Mentee Characteristics and Mentees' Self-reported Outcomes Sara Johnson, Preston Britner, Tara Folan 58 Mediating Effect of Resilience in the Relationship Between Parenting Styles and Anxiety Symptoms in Adolescent Survivors of the 2008 Wenchuan Earthquake Shixiu Sun, Qing Zhu, Fang Fan, Lu Zhang, Yanyun Qin, Shan Cheng, Yuhong Zheng 68 Effect of Parental Relational Aggression on the Association between Parental Psychological Control and Child Relational Aggression Katherine Lau, Monica Marsee, Moira Riley, Genevieve Lapre, Melissa Kunimatsu 59 Socialization of Positive Affect in Depressed Adolescents: The Mediating Role of Emotion Regulation Ashley Maliken, Lynn Katz, Joann Shortt, Nicholas Allen, Betsy Davis, Lisa Sheeber 69 Directional Patterns of Ethnic Aggression among Hispanic and Caucasian Early Adolescents Alysha Ramirez, Noel Card, Deborah Casper 60 Relationships with Parents as Clues to Understanding Gender Differences in Adolescent Depression 53 70 Adolescent-Father Attachment and Psychosocial Adjustment Katherine Kivisto, Christi Culpepper, Deborah Welsh, Debora Baldwin, Sarah Fischer Identity Development in Late Adolescents/Emerging Adults Rebecca Burwell 80 Religious Identity Across the Transition from Adolescence to Young Adulthood Melissa Chan 71 Emotional Flexibility and Affective Matching in High-Risk Dyads: Processes of Emotional Expression in Preadolescents Leah Enns, Dale Stack, Lindsey Barrieau, Elana August, Lisa Serbin, Jane Ledingham, Alex Schwartzman 81 Prospective Links Between Ethnic Socialization, Ethnic and American Identity, and Well-Being Among Asian American Adolescents Meaghan Gartner, Lisa Kiang, Andrew Supple 72 Patterns of Physiological, Self-Reported, and Expressed Emotional Responses in Adolescents with Alexithymia Jennifer Eastabrook, Dianna Lanteigne, Tom Hollenstein, Jessica Flynn 83 Adolescent Perceptions of Acceptable and Appropriate Texting Behaviors as a Form of Social Communication Troy Beckert, Sarah Tulane, J. Vaterlaus 73 The Developmental Cascade from ADHD Symptoms to Conduct Problems and the Moderating Role of Interparental Discord in a Community Sample Amy Williams, Kathryn Karch, Craig Colder, Jennifer Zehe, Carolyn Speidel, Hector Lopez-Vergara 84 Teen Risk Variables Associated with Highrisk Internet Behaviors: The impact on Subsequent Offline Meetings and the Mediating Role of Parents Cheshire Hardcastle, Jennie Noll, Jaclyn Barnes, Kate Haralson, Chad Shenk, Kerry Simmons 74 Evaluating Parental Socialization and Adolescents’ Moral Judgment in Competitive Lying and Truth-telling Context Yat Laam Lau, Jennifer Wong, Catherine Ann Cameron, Kai Men Chieh, Kang Lee Friday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am (Event 3-007) Paper Discussion Symposium East Ballroom Salon A Friday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 75 A Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Personality Development Aidan Wright, Elisa Trucco, Craig Colder 3-007. Diversity in the Company They Keep: Cross-Race/Ethnicity Peer Relationships in Adolescence 76 Infant Attractiveness and Temperament as Well as Participant Age Predict Nurturing Behavior in Young “Parents” Connor Principe, Brian Tapscott, Arian Mobasser, Judith Langlois Chair: Rhiannon L. Smith Discussant: Jaana Juvonen How Cross-race Friendships Matter: Evaluations of Exclusion and the Use of Stereotype Attributions Shelby Cooley, Melanie Killen, Martin Ruck Cross-Race/Ethnicity Friendships in Adolescence and Associations with Social Adjustment Rhiannon Smith, Amanda Rose 77 Predictors of Changes in Negative Cognitive Style and Rumination During Adolescence Jonathan Stange, Lauren Alloy, Lyn Abramson 78 A Latent Profile Analysis of Religiousness, Religious Struggle, Sexual Behavior, and Alcohol Use Gregory Longo, Julee Farley, Jeanette Walters, Jungmeen Kim-Spoon 79 Self-Worth Mediates the Relationship Between Self-Worth Contingencies and 54 (Event 3-008) Paper Discussion Symposium East Ballroom Salon B Friday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 3-008. Expanding the Boundaries: New perspectives on Sex and the Media Inter-parental Conflict and Children’s Psychological Adjustment: Environmental Mediation or Genetic Moderation? Kit Elam, Gemma Lewis, Gordon Harold, Misaki Natsuaki, Anita Thapar (Event 3-010) Roundtable East Meeting 1 Friday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am Chair: Geertjan Overbeek Discussant: Stephen T. Russell Influence of New Media on Adolescent Sexual Behavior and Health Rebecca Collins Parallel Developments of Sexualized Media Consumption and Permissive attitudes in Adolescence: The Role of Perceived Realism Laura Baams, Geertjan Overbeek The Sexual Media Practice Model: How Youth Consume and Engage with Sexual Media and its Effects Autumn Shafer 3-010. Youth Engagement at the Federal, State, and Local LevelsPromising Practices, Challenges, and Opportunities for Research Moderator: Sarah Oberlander Panelists: Suzanne Le Menestrel, Kenneth Jones, Julie Petrokubi (Event 3-010.5) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 10 Friday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am (Event 3-009) Paper Discussion Symposium East Ballroom Salon C Friday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 3-010.5. The Consequences of Discriminatory Gender and Sexuality Harassment for Adolescents: Diverse Regions, Diverse Methodologies 3-009. Family Conflict and Adolescent Problems: Disentangling GeneEnvironment Interplay and Environmental Effects Chair: Elisabeth M. Thompson Discussant: Paul Poteat Adolescent Health and Harassment Based on Discriminatory Bias Katerina Sinclair, Paul Poteat, Brian Koenig, Stephen Russell Harassment based on Sexual Orientation and Gender Expression in High School: The Mitigating Role of Gay-Straight Alliances Mary Pritchard, Elizabeth Morgan Exploring the Unique Impact of Gender and Sexual Orientation Harassment on Adolescent School-related Adjustment Elisabeth Thompson, Katerina Sinclair, Stephen Russell Chair: Briana Horwitz Using Novel Kinship Designs to Examine Links Between Parenting and Adjustment During Pre-Adolescence Shirley McGuire, Majel Baker, Nancy Segal Examining the Association Between Parental Hostility and Adolescent Physical Health Using a Children-of-Twins Design Briana Horwitz, Jenae Neiderhiser, Jody Ganiban, Erica Spotts, Paul Lichtenstein, David Reiss Psychopathic Personality Traits and Negative Parent-to-Child Affect: A Longitudinal Crosslag Twin Study Catherine Tuvblad, Serena Bezdjian, Adrian Raine, Laura Baker 55 (Event 3-011) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 11 Friday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am (Event 3-013) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 13 Friday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 3-011. The Use of Growth Mixture Modeling to Examine Trajectories of Clustered Psychosocial Difficulties Among Diverse Adolescents 3-013. Balancing Developmental Demands: Adolescent Autonomy and Relatedness Across Relational Contexts Chair: Christine L. Patton Physical Attractiveness as a Predictor of Adolescent Autonomy Behavior Megan Schad, Joseph Allen, David Szwedo, Joanna Chango Coordination, Competition and Ambivalence: Autonomy and Relatedness Patterns in Girls’ Interactions with Mentors and Peers Christine Patton, Nancy Deutsch Early Adolescent Peer Foundations as Predictors of Late Adolescent and Young Adult Psychological Adjustment Joanna Chango, Joseph Allen, David Szwedo, Megan Schad Chair: Emma M. Sterrett Discussant: Cheryl Boyce Trajectories of Clustered Risk Behaviors in a Sample of African American and Latino Inner-city Males Followed from Early Adolescence to Early Adulthood. David Henry, Allison Dymnicki, Patrick Tolan, Deborah Gorman-Smith, Michael Schoeny Ecological Predictors of Clustered Risk Behavior Trajectories among Low-Income African American Adolescents Emma Sterrett, Brian Mustanski, Allison Dymnicki, David Henry, Gayle Byck, John Bolland Longitudinal Trajectories of Syndemic Development Among Diverse Young Men Who Have Sex With Men Brian Mustanski, Michelle Birkett, Robert Garofalo (Event 3-014) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 14 Friday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 3-014. Sexuality Education to Foster Sexual Agency among Youth in the U.S. Southwest and Mexico (Event 3-012) Emerging Scholar Session East Meeting 12 Friday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am Chair: Kali Van Campen Discussant: Adela Licona Advancing a Comprehensive Sexuality Education Program in Mexico City: A Case Study Ivan Lacroux How Mothers and School Health Classes Shape Mexican-Origin Girls’ Experiences of Menarche and Womanhood Kali Van Campen Student-Generated Anonymous Sex Questions: Informing Sexuality Education Curriculum Sally Stevens, Elisabeth Thompson, Jenna Vinson, Alison Greene, Claudia Powell 3-012. Emerging Scholars' Event - The Road Less Traveled: Exloring Career Paths Outside of Academia Moderator: Carolyn Spellings, Ryan Landoll Panelists: Joseph Kosciw, Wayne Mitic, Amy Syvertsen, Ruby Takanishi 56 (Event 3-015) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 15 Friday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 3-015. Moral Issues: Exploring the Multiple Processes and Contexts of Delinquent Behavior Chair: Lise M. Youngblade Discussant: Rainer Silbereisen Community Age Structure Moderates the Effect of Adolescent Norms on Delinquent Behavior Dan Hart Parent and Peer Influences: Their Role in Predicting Adolescent Moral Behavior and Delinquency April Thomas, Lise Youngblade Deterring Delinquent Behavior: Moral Judgment or Moral Motivation? Darcia Narvaez, Jeff Brooks, Tonia Bock Patterns of Adolescents` Perceptions of Learning Environments in Secondary School Mathematics Classrooms: A Latent Class Analysis Approach testing for Gender Differences Rebecca Lazarides, Angela Ittel Increasing motivation and interest in science and engineering by redefining school-based learning Martin Storksdieck (Event 3-018) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 19 Friday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 3-018. Understanding Education and Job Training Opportunities for Disadvantaged Youth Chair: Matthew Stagner Pathways from education to employment: Analysis of linked administrative data across Chicago’s workforce development system Elizabeth Weigensberg Promoting Urban Community College Student Identity Development: Implications for Outreach and Implementation of Supports Jiffy Lansing A Conceptual Framework for Self Sufficiency for Vulnerable Youth Robin Dion (Event 3-017) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 18 Friday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 3-017. Factors Enhancing Adolescents’ Motivation and Career Pathways in STEM-Education-Integrating Empirical Results and Practical Implications Chair: Angela Ittel Discussant: Gil Noam Socio-Motivational Determinants for Girls' Pathways of Mathematical Enrolment and Career Choice Helen Watt, Caroline Findlay 57 (Event 3-019) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 2 Friday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 3-021. Attachment Based Treatments for Adolescents: From Symptom Reduction Toward a Theory of Change Chair: Roger Kobak Discussant: Joseph P. Allen Guided by Attachment: Using Attachment Theory to Match to Relational Functions in Functional Family Therapy for Traumatized Youth Patricia Kerig Attachment Based Intervention for Parents of Teens At-Risk: Processes underlying Therapeutic Change Marlene Moretti, Ingrid Obsuth Attachment Based Family Therapy for Suicidal Adolescents: Who Benefits the Most? Roger Kobak, Guy Diamond, Stevie Grassetti 3-019. How Friends Shape the Influence of Organized Activities on Adolescents’ Development: A Look From Outside to Within Activities Chair: Michael Crawford Discussant: Håkan Stattin Sport Participation and Alcohol Use During Adolescence: Mediators and Moderators Explaining the Positive Relation Andrea Vest, Sandi Simpkins Social Experiences in Youth Organized Activities: A Look at Friendships inside the Activities Anne-Sophie Denault, Francois Poulin Association of Urban Young Adolescent’s Peer Processes, Youth Program Quality, and Academic Self-Concept and Achievement David Hansen, William Skorupski, Michael Crawford, Nadia Jessop (Event 3-022) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 8 Friday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 3-022. Peer Victimization and School Functioning: Evidence from Longitudinal Studies of Canadian and American Youth (Event 3-020) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 3 Friday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am Chairs: Patricia McDougall, Tracy Vaillancourt Peer Victimization and Academic Outcomes: Evidence from the Canadian National Longitudinal Survey of Children and Youth Heather Brittain, Tracy Vaillancourt, Eric Duku Longitudinal Links between Peer Victimization, Rejection and School Functioning Tracy Vaillancourt, Heather Brittain, Patricia McDougall A Longitudinal Analysis of Bullying Behavior and Academic Achievement During Middle School Dorothy Espelage, Sabina Low The Unique and Interactive Contributions of Peer Victimization and Teacher-Child Relationships to Children’s School Adjustment Kayla Kuntz, Wendy Troop-Gordon 3-020. International Perspectives on Youth Civic Engagement Chair: Lonnie R. Sherrod Discussant: Connie Flanagan Active, passive and standby citizens Erik Amnå Young citizen's views and aspirations of their role in society M. Loreto Martinez Dimensions of civic participation as determinants of an activist identity Tsakani Ngomane (Event 3-021) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 7 Friday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 58 (Event 3-023) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 9 Friday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am Shrija Dirghangi, Dawn DeLay, Brett Laursen, Ashley Richmond, Amy Hartl, Daniel Dickson, Cody Hiatt 3-023. Reward-Related DecisionMaking and Psychopathology: Adolescence as Sensitive Period 5 Early Psychosocial Context and Teenage Sexual Behavior Triin Anton, Elizabeth Tilley 6 Family Relationships and Emotional Development in Adolescence Miriam Gallarin, Angela Ittel, Frances Gottwald, Linda Juang 7 Understanding Chinese-American Adolescents Non-disclosures to Parents: A Grounded-theory Approach Jenny Yau 8 Mothers’ Beliefs About Adolescent Behavior, Parenting Efficacy and Parenting in an Ethnically and Economically Diverse Sample Stephanie Wright, Christy Buchanan, Sarah Myers 9 Raising Sons and Daughters in African American Families: A Within-Family Exploration of Parental Differential Treatment Aryn Dotterer, Shawn Whiteman Chair: Carla Sharp Discussant: Monique Ernst Intentionality understanding in juvenile delinquents: Brain and behavior in the Ultimatum Game Eveline Crone, Wouter van den Bos, Berna Guroglu Adolescent risk-taking and the brain Stephanie Burnett, Masud Husain, SarahJayne Blakemore Reward processing as neurobiological endophenotype in the development of adolescent depression Carla Sharp, Lane Strathearn, Heather Pane, Levi Herman, Tyson Reuter Friday, 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm 10 Parenting and Academic Competence in Early Adolescence: Direct and Indirect Effects Selva Lewin-Bizan, Richard Lerner (Event 3-024) Poster Session 6 Exhibit Hall B Friday, 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm 1 2 3 4 11 The Moderating Roles of Family Process on the Association Between Stress and Depression in Asian American Adolescents Xiaoyun Zhang, Yan Xia, Maria Rosario de Guzman Pubertal Development and Adolescent Antisocial behavior: Amplification by Neighborhood Context? Tina Kretschmer, Bonamy Oliver, Barbara Maughan 12 Gender Differences in Observed Autonomy and Connectedness of Adolescents and their Mothers under High- and Low-Conflict Conditions Efrat Sher-Censor, David Oppenheim, Abraham Sagi-Schwartz The Moderating Effect of Demographic Characteristics on the Relationship between Parent-Child Variables and Effortful Control in Emerging Adults Alina Bonci, Kendra Westerhaus, Maria Wong 13 The Role of Parenting Style in Predicting Positive Youth Development in High School Seniors Edmond Bowers, Jacqueline Lerner Reassessing the Development of Psychological Essentialism in the Social Category of Gender R. Eidson, John Coley 14 Types of Sibling Relationships Among Emerging Adults Richard Lanthier, Andrew Campbell Age Related Trends in Conflict Reports: Developmental Trends in Cognitive Abilities 59 15 Protective Effects of Racial Socialization and General Parenting Practices for African American Adolescents Exposed to Community Violence Jessica Henry, Sharon Lambert 25 Mediators of the Relationship Between Acculturative Stress and Internalizing Symptoms for Immigrant Origin Youth Dalal Katsiaficas, Carola Suarez-Orozco, Selcuk Sirin, Taveeshi Gupta 16 Longitudinal Associations Between Sexual Risk Reduction and Program Participation in a Sample of Urban Adolescents Deinera Exner-Cortens, Jennifer Tiffany, John Eckenrode 26 Do Who and When Matter? The Mentor Type and Timing Interaction in Naturally Occurring Mentoring Relationships Veronica Fruiht, Laura Wray-Lake 27 Acculturation and Sexual Risk-Taking Among Latino College Students Steve Tran, Marcela Raffaelli 17 Longitudinal Associations Between Passions and Adjustment in Adolescence: Positive Mood and Unstructured Activities as Mediators Andrea DesRoches, Teena Willoughby 28 “One World, One Dream?” Parents’ Goals for Early Adolescents in the United States and China Yang Qu, Eva Pomerantz 18 Developing Responsibility in Youth Programs: “I didn’t want to disappoint them” Niwako Sugimura, Ida Salusky, Joanna Wu, Reed Larson 29 Consider Both: Perceptions of TeacherBased Racial and Gender Discrimination among African American Adolescents Geneene Thompson 19 A Longitudinal Psychosociocultural Analysis of Latina/o Adolescents’ Academic Attitudes, Motivation and Commitment Alicia Ayala, Gabriela Chavira 30 Immigrant Youth in Canada: The Risks of Victimization Lauren Dolente, Lina Darwich, Shelley Hymel, Terry Waterhouse 20 Adolescents from Single- and Dual-Income Families: Family and Educational Attributes and the Role of Perceptions of Parental Work Tick-Ngee Sim, Serene Pan 31 Impact of Social Support on Health-Related Quality of Life and Condition Management in Adolescents With Inflammatory Bowel Disease Jennifer Kunz, Amitha Gumidyala, Rachel Greenley 21 Latino Parent’s Educational Involvement, Cultural Capital, and Adolescent Academic Outcomes Diamond Bravo, Gabriela Chavira 32 Growth in Internalizing Symptoms: Risk or Protective Factor for Escalation in Alcohol Use? Carolyn Speidel, Craig Colder, Liliana Lengua, William Wieczorek, Larry Hawk 22 Female Adolescent Depression Symptoms and Post-Secondary Education Enrollment: It’s a Matter of Time Vincenza Gruppuso, Jacqueline Homel, Kara Thompson, Bonnie Leadbeater 33 Co-occurring Internalizing and Externalizing Symptoms and Adolescent Substance Use Matthew Scalco, Elisa Trucco, Craig Colder, Liliana Lengua, William Wieczorek, Larry Hawk, Jennifer Read 23 Social Connectedness: Contributions to Positive Perceptions of the Middle School Transition Kathleen Day, Jill Hamm, Kerrylin Lambert 34 Commitment Language and Proximal and Distal Goal Attainment in a Delinquency Intervention Caitlin Smith, Stanley Huey, Dawn McDaniel 24 Toward a unifying model of adolescent purpose, motivation, civic engagement, and occupational choice Lia Falco, Jessica Summers 35 Does social connectedness protect against self-harm in adolescents? Paul Jose 60 36 HIV-Related Communication with a Partner: Does Body Image Matter? Meghan Gillen Regulation in a sample of Italian Adolescents Roberto Baiocco, Susanna Pallini, Fiorenzo Laghi, Cecilia Pace, Giulio Zavattini 37 Predictors of HPV Vaccination in Late Adolescence Kate Kelly, Sara Vasilenko, Eva Lefkowitz 48 The Emotional Reactions to an Interloper for Average Versus Highly Relationally Aggressive Youth Danielle Quigley, Tina Daniels, Christine Polihronis, Katherine Magner, Tim Trant 38 Sleep and Risk-taking: The Mediating Role of Impulsivity Erika Bagley, Martha Cox, Vonnie McLoyd 49 Gender Differences in School to Family Conflict and Enrichment in Portuguese College Students-Parents Claudia Andrade 39 Risky Substance use Among Adolescents in Residential Youth Care Institutions and Special Education: Results of a Two Wave Study Annelies Kepper, Karin Monshouwer, Wilma Vollebergh 50 Social Goals and Self-Ratings of Popularity and Likeability: Predicting Relational Aggression during Adolescence Karmon Dyches, Lara Mayeux 40 Family Socioeconomic Hardship and Adolescent Substance Use Outcomes: The Mediating Roles of Parental Relationship Quality and Self-Regulation Julee Farley, Jeanette Walters, Jungmeen Kim-Spoon 51 The Peer Network and Individual Characteristics of Girls High and Low on Peer Sexual Harassment Erica Miller, Marla Brassard 41 Involvement in Bullying as a Moderator Between Childhood Risk/Protective Factors and Externalizing Behaviors in Adolescence Michael Sheehan, Malcolm Watson, Jasmina Burdzovic Andreas 52 Private Reactions and Perceived Peer Reactions to Physical Fights in School and the Role of Personal Characteristics Molly Dawes, Tabitha Wurster, Amelia Hock, Hongling Xie 42 The Effects of Peer Victimization on Adolescents' Physical Health Over Time Alanna Hager, Bonnie Leadbeater 53 Academic Teaming: Do the Benefits Outweigh the Costs? Leslie Echols, Samantha Simmons, Emily VanSlyke 43 Depressive Symptoms of Victims of Cyber or Traditional Aggression: Can Certain Attributions Buffer the Negative Effect? Sonja Perren, Fabio Sticca, Françoise Alsaker 54 Communication and Sexual Behaviors Within Adolescent Couples Michael Langlais, Deborah Welsh, Katherine Kivisto 44 Predicting positive student engagement to bully victimization and witnessing bulling Karl Hennig, Angele MacTavish 55 A Moment Like This: How Staying in the Present Can Increase Young Couples’ Relationship Satisfaction Taylor O'Holleran, Loren Bengston, Karon Volk, Erica Barton, Robin Hertz, Heidemarie Laurent 45 Adolescent Dating and Disordered Eating: Does the Quality of Dating Relationships Play a Role? Andrea Hamel, Shannon Zaitsoff, Andrew Taylor, Rosanne Menna, Daniel Le Grange 56 Gender Differences and Predictors of Romantic Conflict in Adolescent Relationships Tabitha Wurster, Laurence Steinberg 46 The Nature of Adolescent Friendships in Central Ghana Yuli Tak, Antonius Cillessen 57 The Contribution of Social Support and Coping Strategies to Wellbeing in Adolescents Tracy Ludlow 47 Best Friend Attachment, Quality of Parental and Peer Attachment and Emotion 61 58 Affective Experience in the Natural Environments of Female Adolescents with Primary Depression vs. Obesity and Comorbid Depression Karen Jakubowski, Dana Rofey, Jennifer Silk, Ronette Blake, Ronald Dahl 70 Gene-Environment Interplay in the Relationship Between Adolescent Delinquency and Peer Deviance Tom McAdams, Richard Rowe, Fruhling Rijsdijk, Barbara Maughan, Thalia Eley 71 Emotional Word Ratings in Youth at HighRisk for Depression Karen Garelik, Stephanie Davis, Jennifer Silk 59 Examining Depression and Neighborhood Violence Using a Mixed Method Approach: Children and Early Adolescents in MedellinColombia Paulina Velez, Diego Restrepo, Elizabeth Trejos-Castillo 72 Modeling the Link Between Personality and Emotion Regulation in Intergenerational Stories: The Mediating Role of Family Function Paul Nelson 60 Explaining Racial Disparities in Adolescent Depression: The Role of Individual, Family, and School Factors Vinetra King, Briauna Knott, Sylvie Mrug, Michael Windle 73 Do Parents Only Have to Avoid Being Nasty, or Should They Even Be Nice? The Case of Adolescent Substance Use and Deviance J. Gowert Masche, Kristina Persson, Malin Löfgren 61 Gender Differences in GxE Research: BDNF Interacts With Age 13 Stress to Predict Depression in Girls and ADHD in Boys at Age 15 Rachel Salk, Lyn Abramson, Janet Hyde 74 Morality, Divinity, and Development: Two Religious Perspectives Across the Lifespan Jessica McKenzie, Lene Arnett Jensen 62 Psychopathic Traits, Friendship Quality, and Social Skills in Early Adolescence Scott Risser 75 Preferential Treatment and Who you Become: Effects of Physical Attractiveness on Decision Making and Personality Megan Schad, Caroline White, Joseph Allen, Joanna Chango, Elenda Hessel 63 Coping, Cumulative Risk and Adjustment Stephanie Thompson, Liliana Lengua 64 Evaluating Adaptive Capacities in the Transition to Adulthood Colleen Dillon, Sarah Lowe, Elise Tewksbury, Jean Rhodes 76 Why do we Forgive? An Analysis of the effects of BIS and Empathy Conrad Baldner, Gregory Longo, Mark Scott 65 Evaluating School Initiated Anti- Bullying Programme From a Participatory Action Perspective. Valeriya Bravo, Jennifer Connolly, Freida Ross, Karrie Weinstock 77 Mediating effect of beliefs and personality in the relationship between injury and adolescent risk taking in sports Linda Paquette, Maggie Dumais 78 “We Are All Gods If We Can Make Our Own Choices”: The Role of Agency in Emerging Adults’ Perspectives on Religion and Spirituality Joseph Schwab 66 School Size and Academic Achievement: Risk Factors for Student Violence? Danielle Hill, Emilya Adelson, Sylvie Mrug 67 Preventing Substance use Among Adolescents: A Review of Positive Youth Development Programs Kari Gloppen 79 Patterns of Character Strengths Associated with Identity During Emerging Adulthood Sherry Beaumont, Cherisse Seaton 68 Does Relational Aggression Lead to Peer Rejection? Moderating Role of Affective Empathy and Perceived Popularity Hsiao-Wen Liao, Ching-Ling Cheng 62 80 Identity Foreclosure and Athletic Participation: Perhaps Why Brett Favre Couldn’t Retire. Dana Krieg, Ryan Lacy stereotypes on psychological and social outcomes? What is the role of masculinities in adolescent development? How does gender intersect with race, ethnicity, sexuality, and/or social class? How do we study such intersections? What does the study of gender look like from an international perspective? What are the implications of our studies of gender for improving our schools? 81 Yo White kid: School Ethnic Composition and Ethnic Identity Development in Black, Chinese, Dominican, and White Adolescents Damira Rasheed, María Hernández, Diana Andrade, Megan Sy, Niobe Way, Diane Hughes Biography. Alisha Ali Ph.D. is an Associate Professor in the Department of Applied Psychology at New York University. Her research investigates innovative approaches to serving the educational and psychosocial needs of lowincome communities in urban settings. Dr. Ali’s recent projects have examined factors related to mental health in women and youth, including the effects of poverty, violence, and discrimination. Among her current research is a series of projects, funded by the Allstate Foundation and the American Psychological Foundation, examining the psychosocial impact of economic empowerment programs for families residing in domestic violence shelters. She is also the creator of the New York-based PhotoCLUB project entitled Flash Forward, a digital photography program aimed at supporting the attainment of educational and personal goals of high-risk youth. She recently completed an NIMH-funded longitudinal investigation of the effects of a poverty transition program on depressive symptoms among women and men in New York City. Dr. Ali is editor, along with Dana C. Jack, of the book Silencing the Self Across Cultures: Depression and Gender in the Social World published in 2010 by Oxford University Press. 82 Gays & Grades: The Effects of Being "Out" on Academic Achievement Ryan Watson, Katerina Sinclair, Stephen Russell 83 Calling Versus Texting: Adolescents’ Preferences in Cell Phone Communication Anne Fletcher, Bethany Blair, Erin Gaskin 84 Do the Rich get Richer? Social Competence, Perception of Facebook Usefulness, and Adjustment to College Chia-chen Yang, B. Brown Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm (Event 3-025) Invited Roundtable East Ballroom Salon A Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 3-025. Gender in the Social Sciences Moderator: Niobe Way, Department of Applied Psychology, University of New York Panelists: Alisha Ali,New York University Aida Hurtado, University of California-Santa Barbara Ramaswami Mahalingam, University of Michigan Biography. Aida Hurtado Ph.D., Chair of the Department of Chicana and Chicano Studies, University of California-Santa Barbara, is a social psychologist whose research focuses on race, class, ethnicity, sexuality, and gender. She came to UCSB from UC Santa Cruz, where she spent more than 20 years as a scholar in the Psychology Department. The majority of her work is on feminist theory, women's issues, and Latino educational achievement. She earned her master's and doctoral degrees from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. She is the author of several books, including Voicing Chicana Feminisms: Young Women Speak Out on Sexuality and Identity; The Abstract. The study of gender in the social sciences has been dominated by a focus on gender differences. With few exceptions, researchers have only just begun to examine the diverse experiences among boys or girls or the impact of gender norms, conventions, or stereotypes on adjustment, identities, and relationships. Furthermore, researchers have rarely examined the intersections of gender, race, ethnicity, sexuality, and social class. This roundtable includes senior scholars from psychology and sociology who have devoted their careers to the study of gender. Questions posed in the session include: What are the different ways of understanding gender and its impact on developmental processes? How do we assess the impact of gender norms, conventions, and 63 (Event 3-025.5) Paper Discussion Symposium East Ballroom Salon B Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm Color of Privilege: Three Blasphemies on Race and Feminism; and Chicana/o Identity in a Changing U.S. Society: ¿Quién Soy? ¿Quiénes Somos?, which she wrote with Patricia Gurin of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Dr. Hurtado has received numerous awards and honors, including the 2010 Women of Color Psychologies Award from the Association of Women in Psychology. The award recognizes her paper, "A View From Within and From Without: The Development of Latina Feminist Psychology," which she co-authored with graduate student Karina Cervantes. The paper appears in The Handbook of U.S. Latino Psychology. In addition, in 2007, Hurtado was a recipient of the American Educational Research Association's SAGE Award for distinguished contributions to gender equity in education research. 3-025.5. Understanding Ethnic-Racial Identity across Adolescence in Context Chair: Aerika Brittian Discussant: Margaret B. Spencer Family Ethnic Socialization and Felt Pressure: An Exploration of Ethnic Identity and Self Esteem in the Family Context Carlos Santos, Kimberly Updegraff, Carol Martin Neighborhood Influences on African American Adolescents’ Racial Identity Deborah Rivas Drake, Dawn Paula Witherspoon "Hapa, Latino, White, and Unique:" The Role of Ethnic Identity and Context in Shaping Biracial Young Adults' Psychosocial Outcomes and Mental Health Aerika Brittian, Adriana Umaña-Taylor, Chelsea Derlan Biography. Ramaswami Mahalingam received his Ph.D. in Developmental Psychology from the University of Pittsburgh. He is currently Associate Professor in the Psychology Department at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. He has four major lines of research. In one line of research he investigated how extreme gender discrimination, such as sex selective abortion, affects community mental health in various parts of India. He also studied children and adults’ beliefs about caste. In another line of research, he has been studying how model minority stereotypes affect the psychological well-being of Asian American men and women in the United States. In his third line of research, he is studying the professional identity development of women engineering students and women engineering faculty members in India. In his fourth line of research, he examines whether nurturing mindful awareness enhances the resilience of members of marginalized community members. He edited two books: Multicultural Curriculum (Routledge) with Cameron McCarthy; Cultural Psychology of Immigrants (Lawrence Erlbaum). He teaches courses on gender psychology, cultural psychology of immigrants, psychology of mindfulness and psychology of films. (Event 3-026) Paper Discussion Symposium East Ballroom Salon C Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 3-026. Puberty and Stress: A Vulnerability-Stress Perspective on Individual Differences in Timing Effects Chair: Lisa M. Sontag-Padilla Discussant: Julia A. Graber Pubertal Development and Internalizing Symptoms Among Girls in Foster Care Jane Mendle, Mark Van Ryzin, Misaki Natsuaki, Leslie Leve Testing a Biopsychosocial Model of Timing Effects on Psychopathology in Early Adolescence Mary Saczawa, Julia Graber, Lisa SontagPadilla, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn, Michelle Warren Psychosocial Moderators and Processes Explaining Sex-Differentiated Links between Pubertal Timing and Depression Colleen Conley, Karen Rudolph, Nicole Llewellyn 64 (Event 3-027) Poster Discussion Symposium East Meeting 1 Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 3-027. Not Caring About Right or Wrong: Developmental and Peercontext Processes in Early Adolescents' Moral Disengagement Chairs: Simona C. Caravita, Eveline GutzwillerHelfenfinger Moral Disengagement and Bully/victim Problems: Concurrent and Longitudinal Associations Eveline Gutzwiller-Helfenfinger, Simone Merlin, Françoise Alsaker Moral Disengagement and the Influence of Friendship Networks: The Role of Perceived Popularity and Bullying Behavior Simona Caravita, Jelle Sijtsema, Gianluca Gini Moral Disengagement When Witnessing Bullying: An Investigation of Morality and Bystander Behaviour in Canadian Schools Shelley Hymel, Sandra Gregory, Jessica Trach, Ellen Shumka, Matthew Lee Gender and Moral Disengagement Susan Swearer, Rhonda Turner Monica Sanchez, Esteban Cardemil, Wendy Grolnick, Elizabeth Flamm, Kristine Marbell, Jacquelyn Raftery Family Matters: The Role of Mental Health Stigma and Social Support on Depressive Symptoms and Subsequent Help Seeking among African American Boys. Michael Lindsey, Von Nebbitt, Sean Joe (Event 3-029) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 11 Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 3-029. Practical and Conceptual Issues in Naturalistic Research on Families: Integrating Biological, Observational, and Diary Methods Chair: Bridget M. Reynolds The Inclusion of Naturalistic Biological Measures in Family Research: Implications and Methodological Considerations Leah Dickenson, Bridget Reynolds, Rena Repetti, Theodore Robles Intensive Repeated Measures in Naturalistic Settings: Research in the Family Context Bridget Reynolds, Rena Repetti, Theodore Robles Conflict Contagion in the Family: Using Daily Diaries to Investigate Process Meredith Sears, Bridget Reynolds, Rena Repetti, Theodore Robles Advantages and Challenges of Conducting In-home Observation to Study Family Processes Delana Parker, Rena Repetti (Event 3-028) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 10 Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 3-028. It’s All in the Family: The Contextual Role of Parental Behavior and Family Social Support in Academic Performance, Behavioral Problems and Treatment Seeking for Minority Youth (Event 3-030) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 12 Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm Chair: Monica Sanchez Buffering Discrimination: The Effects of Academic and Ethnic Socialization on Academic and Behavioral Outcomes in Mexican American Families. Spencer Richards, Melanie Domenech Rodriguez The Contextual Role of Parental Behavior and Differential Acculturation and Family Values in Parent-Child Conflict and Behavioral Problems for Latino Youth. 3-030. Understanding Parenting and Adolescent Adjustment in Latino/a Families: How Cultural Orientation Matters Chair: Kathleen M. Roche Discussant: Clea McNeely (continued) 65 Immigrant Parents’ Educational Aspirations for Adolescent Children Amy Langenkamp Cultural Orientations and Latino/a Adolescent Autonomy Development Kathleen Roche, Margaret Caughy, Luisa Franzini Neighborhood Risk, Parenting, and Adolescent Internalizing: The Protective Role of Mexican American Mothers’ Cultural Beliefs Rebecca White, Mark Roosa, Katharine Zeiders, Nancy Gonzales, George Knight, Jenn-Yun Tein 3-032. Social and Substance-useRelated Influences on Sexual Risk and Protective Behaviors Chair: Jennifer A. Bailey Longitudinal Associations Between Binge Drinking and Casual Sex During the First Year of College Jennifer Walsh, Robyn Fielder, Michael Carey, Kate Carey The effects of marijuana initiation, escalation, and peak use during adolescence on age 33 problem behavior Marina Epstein, Jennifer Bailey, Karl Hill, J David Hawkins College Men's Binge-Drinking and Hook-Ups in the Context of Bros and Masculinity Norms: A Mixed Methods Analysis Jerel Calzo Romantic relationship characteristics and alcohol use: Longitudinal associations with dual method contraception use Jennifer Bailey, Kevin Haggerty, Richard Catalano, Charles Fleming (Event 3-031) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 13 Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 3-031. Cyber Aggression and Victimization: Peer, Family, Ethnic and Technological Risk Contexts Chair: Kevin Runions Is Cyberbullying Really Worse than Traditional Bullying, or is it a Question of Bystander Presence? Fabio Sticca, Françoise Alsaker, Sonja Perren Cyber Victimization and Subsequent Cyber Aggression: The Moderating Influence of Peer Rejection Michelle Wright, Linda Camras, Yan Li Same Parenting Methods for the Same Medium? An Exploration of the Interaction between Ethnicity and Parenting on Electronic Aggression Danielle Law, Monique Gagne, Shereen Khan, Jennifer Shapka On-Line Media as Context: Affordances for Cyber Aggression and Victimization Kevin Runions, Jennifer Shapka, Julian Dooley, Kathryn Modecki (Event 3-033) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 15 Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 3-033. New Goals for Social Goals Research? Longitudinal and SocialContextual Perspectives in Early Adolescence Chair: Sarah Kiefer Prospective Associations Among Social Goals, Perceptions of Social Success, and Aggression During Early Adolescence Sarah Kiefer, Tiina Ojanen Where Do Goals Come from? Examining Self-esteem, Narcissism, and Temperament in the Development of Adolescent Social Goals Tiina Ojanen Do Social Goals Affect Adolescent Friendships? Agentic and Communal Goals in Adolescent Friendship Selection and Social Influence Jelle Sijtsema, Tiina Ojanen (Event 3-032) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 14 Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm (continued) 66 Context and Goal Setting: The Case of Affective Ties Amanda Thorn, Elizabeth Lemerise, Kristen Cushman (Event 3-036) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 19 Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm (Event 3-034) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 17 Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 3-036. Risky Business: Popularity and Social Influence Processes in Adolescence Chair: Marlene Sandstrom Discussant: Sylvie Mrug Standing Out and Fitting In: Popularity, Conformity & Risk in High School Marlene Sandstrom, Antonius Cillessen Are High Status Adolescents More Influential or More Susceptible to Peer Influence of Alcohol, Marijuana, and Tobacco Use? William Burk, Cecile Mathys, Antonius Cillessen Peer Influence Susceptibility Measured with an Experimental Paradigm: Longitudinal Associations with Sexual Risk Behavior Sophia Choukas-Bradley, Mitchell Prinstein, Geoffrey Cohen 3-034. Nuanced Effects and Moderators of Discrimination on the Wellbeing of LGBT Youth Chair: Lina Darwich Identifying Pathways to Anxiety and Depressive Symptoms in LGBQ Adolescents: An Interactive Approach Jordan Simonson, Amy Mezulis, Sarah Crystal Differential Effects of Gay-Straight Alliances for LGBTQ and Heterosexual Youth Paul Poteat, Katerina Sinclair, Craig DiGiovanni, Stephen Russell LGBQ Youth Responses to Victimization Lina Darwich, Shelley Hymel, Terry Waterhouse (Event 3-037) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 2 Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm (Event 3-035) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 18 Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 3-037. Multiple perspectives on volunteering in adolescence 3-035. Individual and Social Influences on Adolescents’ Career Development - International Perspectives Chair: Burkhard Gniewosz Presentation: Family and peer influences in adolescents’ volunteering behaviour Anne van Goethem, Anne van Hoof, Marcel van Aken, Jan Boom, Bram Orobio de Castro How does voluntary service promote positive development? The role of agency and ideology experience linking service and positive outcomes. Gabriela Christoph, Burkhard Gniewosz, Heinz Reinders “You don’t have to be a nerd to be a leader”: Perspectives on Youth-Adult Partnership in Local Government Julie Petrokubi, Shepherd Zeldin Chairs: Baerbel Kracke, Erik Porfeli Work Valences as Predictors of Career Adaptabilities over Time Erik Porfeli, Bora Lee Career-Related Parenting Behaviors and Exploration in Mexican Adolescents: Variable- and Person-Centered Analyses Julia Dietrich, Baerbel Kracke, Jessica Komes Impact of a Classroom-based Intervention on Change and Stability of Career Exploration Maria do Ceu Taveira, Martina Konigstedt 67 (Event 3-038) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 3 Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm (Event 3-040) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 8 Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 3-038. Getting to Green: A Narrative Perspective on Environmentalism, Identity and Generativity in Activist Youth 3-040. Social, Educational and Psychological Antecedents of Radicalization of Youth in the West Chair: Allard R. Feddes Discussant: Phil L. Hammack My In-group is Superior!” Susceptibility for Radical Right-Wing Attitudes and Behaviors in Dutch Youth Allard Feddes, Bertjan Doosje, Kees Van den Bos, Annemarie Loseman, Liesbeth Mann Ethnic Socialization and the Onset of Radicalization in Muslim Minority Youth in the Netherlands Diana van Bergen, Trees Pels, Doret De Ruyter, Evelyn Ersanilli Radicalization, Securitization and the Simulacrum of Youth Paul Bramadat Chair: Ed de St. Aubin Discussant: Ed de St. Aubin Environmental Identity and Generativity: Their Relationship with Personal Environmental Narratives Susan Alisat, Elise Bisson, Joan Norris, Michael Pratt Green Legacies: An Examination of Generativity, Identity, and Stories of Family Environmental Lessons by Emerging Adults Elise Bisson, Susan Alisat, Joan Norris, Michael Pratt Generativity, Community Involvement and Environmental Activism among Youths M. Matsuba, Brendan Fernandes (Event 3-041) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 9 Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm (Event 3-039) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 7 Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 3-041. Social Functioning and Depression: Reciprocal Predictive Links Across Time and Relationships 3-039. Moving Beyond Cross-Sectional Correlations in the Study of Youth Purpose Chair: Ann Spilker Romantic Relationships, Peer Victimization and Depressive Symptoms in Early Adolescence: Short-Term Longitudinal Links Jennifer Connolly, Skye Stephens, Wendy Josephson Serious Long-term Social Sequelae of Mild Depressive Symptoms in Early Adolescence Joseph Allen, Joanna Chango, David Szwedo Co-occurring Trajectories of Depression, and Oppositionality from Adolescence to Young Adulthood Bonnie Leadbeater, Kara Thompson, Vincenza Gruppuso Chair: Patrick L. Hill Longitudinal Correlates of Purpose in Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood Patrick Hill Using an Exemplar Methodology to Examine Young People’s Purposes in Life Kendall Bronk Derailed by Diversity? The Role of Purpose in Negotiating Ethnically Diverse Contexts Anthony Burrow 68 (Event 3-042) Exhibit Hall B, Posters G1 – G10 Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm Connie Flanagan, Nancy Guerra, Cigdem Kagitcibasi, Silvia Koller, Todd Little, RaijaLeena Punamäki, Marcela Raffaelli, Robert Serpell, Ruby Takanishi, Lauree Tilton-Weaver 3-042. Meet with Federal Agency and Foundation Representatives Friday, 1:45 pm - 3:15 pm Chairs: Carolyn R. Spellings, Laura Wray-Lake, SRA Emerging Scholar Representatives (Event 3-044) Poster Session 7 Exhibit Hall B Friday, 1:45 pm - 3:15 pm Three foundations and seven US agencies will have posters on display throughout the Biennial Meeting. During this session, representatives from these foundations and US Federal agencies will be available for questions and discussions. US Federal Agency Representatives: Sarah Bacon, Center for Disease Control and Prevention Suzanne Le Menestrel, National Institute of Food and Agriculture, US Department of Agriculture Sarah Oberlander, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, Department of Health and Human Services, Julia Zehr, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health Valerie Maholmes, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health Cheryl Boyce, National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health Mariela Shirley, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, National Institutes of Health Foundation Representatives: Simon Sommer, Jacobs Foundation Kimberly DuMont, William T. Grant Foundation Susan Dauber, Spencer Foundation (Event 3-043) Lunch Harbourside 2 & 3 Friday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 1 Pubertal development, personality and substance use in boys: a longitudinal study Natalie Castellanos Ryan, Sophie Parent, Frank Vitaro, Richard E. Tremblay, Jean R. Séguin 2 New Thoughts on Hostile Attributions: The Importance of Provocateur Motivation Melissa Kunimatsu, Monica Marsee 3 Understanding Cultural Influences on Evolutionary Knowledge Erin Smith 4 A mindfulness-based parenting intervention for increasing emotional regulatory skills among at-risk adolescent mothers: Results of a pilot study Noelle Leonard, Christina Laitner, Bethany Casarjian, Robin Casarjian, Marya Gwadz, Cathleen Cisse, Elizabeth Solomon 5 Perceptions of Family Quality Buffer Against Depression for Brazilian Youth with Relationship Difficulties Dawn DeLay, Christopher Hafen, Josafá Da Cunha, Lidia Weber, Brett Laursen, Ashley Richmond, Shrija Dirghangi, Cody Hiatt, Amy Hartl, Daniel Dickson 6 Family versus Individual Therapy: Impact on Discrepancies between Parents’ and Adolescents’ Perceptions over Time Xiamei Guo, Natasha Slesnick 7 Substance Use and Changes in Parental Monitoring During Middle School: A PersonOriented Approach Melissa Lippold, Mark Greenberg, Linda Collins 8 Parent-Adolescent Relationships: Dyadic Interactions During the Transition to High School Emily Kear, Susan Lollis, Sheila Marshall 3-043. Meet the Scientist Lunch A ticketed event required advance registration. Scientists: Jeffrey Arnett, William Bukowski, Laurie Chassin, Xinyin Chen, Carol Martin, 69 9 To drive or not to drive: Adolescent autonomy and decision-making about driving Melissa Witkow, Nicolette Rickert, Brian Gnerre, Melissa Wurster, Katherine Stewart Perceived Academic Control and Academic Competence Importance Danielle Busby, Sharon Lambert, Nicholas Ialongo 20 No Parent Left Behind: Predicting Parental Involvement in Adolescents’ Education Within a Sociodemographically Diverse Population Sira Park, Susan Holloway 10 Financial Hardship and Adolescent Outcomes: The Moderating Role of Caregivers' Functioning Mia Budescu, Ronald Taylor, Azeb Gebre 11 Family Process Variables Mediate the Association of Paternal Depressive Symptoms with Child Depressive Symptoms across Late Adolescence Erin Barker, Charlene Hendricks, Marc Bornstein 21 Motivation and Engagement of Male and Female High School Students in Kenyan and US Science Classes Lee Shumow, Jennifer Schmidt, Teresa Wasonga, Anna Strati 22 The Interplay of Race/ Ethnicity and Discrimination for Adolescents’ Academic Efficacy 12 Distinguishing Young Adolescents Who Do and Do Not Report Improvement in Sexual Communication with Their Mothers Brett Robinson, Heather Sears, E. Sandra Byers Jessica Harding, Diane Hughes, Niobe Way 23 Predicting College Students’ Value of Education: A Longitudinal Examination of the Relative Impact of Parent and Peer Support Rachael Robnett, Margarita Azmitia 13 Attachment as a Protective Factor for Youth Exposed to Violence Jessica Houston, John Grych 14 Mexican-origin Adolescents’ Positive Development: The Role of Siblings Sue Rodriguez, Sarah Killoren, Kimberly Updegraff, Susan McHale, Adriana UmañaTaylor 24 Parent Social and Government Trust and Youth Civic Responsibility Elizabeth White, Rashmita Mistry 25 The Influence of Acculturation and Psychological Stress on Substance Use among Foreign-born College Students Azeb Gebre 15 Context Specific Protective Factors for African American Adolescents Exposed to Community Violence and Discriminatory Events Jessica Henry, Sharon Lambert 26 Challenges Adults Face When Engaging in Youth-Adult Partnerships Mariah Kornbluh, Amber Duddy, Tom Akiva, Jamie Heng-Chieh Wu, Laurie Van Egeren 16 The Over-Scheduling Hypothesis Revisited: Intensity of Adolescents’ Organized Activity Participation and Young Adult Outcomes Andrea Vest, Joseph Mahoney 27 The Effects of the Model Minority Stereotype on Academic Outcomes among the Korean-American Adolescents Hui Chu, Christia Brown 17 Adolescent Activity Involvement Patterns: Predicting Adult Health Outcomes Andrea Finlay, Jennifer Maggs 28 A Cultural-Developmental Analysis of Children’s Morality in the Indian Context Niyati Pandya, Lene Arnett Jensen 18 Impact of Small Town/Rural Community Youth Development Projects on Youths’ Perception of Social Capital and Community Health Status Elaine Johannes 29 Differential Effects of Perceived Discrimination in Early and Middle Adolescence Thomas Fuller-Rowell, Jacquelynne Eccles, Steve Peck, Amanda Brodish, Courtney Cogburn, Oksana Malanchuk 19 Community Violence Exposure and Academic Achievement: The Role of 70 30 Mothers, Fathers, Sons, and Daughters: An Exploration in Parent-Youth Relationships in Croatian Families Barbara Samarin, Susan Chuang Sarah Domoff, Morgan Dynes, Carolyn Tompsett 41 Are parents aware of children’s peer victimization experiences? Results from a multiethnic sample Irene Vitoroulis, Heather Brittain, Amanda Krygsman, Patricia McDougall, Tracy Vaillancourt 31 Pathways to teen pregnancy and teen motherhood for abused and non-abused females: pre-pregnancy predictors. Jennie Noll, James Peugh, Chad Shenk 32 Co-Occurrence of Depressive Symptoms and Alcohol Use for Adolescent Boys and Girls Adrian Fortner, Teena Willoughby 42 Racial/Ethnic Differences in the Association Between Sexual Orientation and Violent and Delinquent Behaviors Among Bullied Youth Jeffrey Duong, Catherine Bradshaw 33 Developmental Associations Between Alcohol Use, Non-aggressive Delinquency and Violence from Adolescence to Young Adulthood Yao Zheng, H. Harrington Cleveland 43 Explicit and Implicit Peer Evaluation: Associations with Aggression, Bullying, and Prosocial Behavior in Early Adolescence Tessa Lansu, William Bukowski, Antonius Cillessen 34 The Role of Domain Specific Self-Esteem on Risk-Taking in African American and Caucasian Emerging Adults Lendi Joy, Sarah Domoff, Carolyn Tompsett 44 The Association between Parental Psychological Control and Relational Aggression in Adolescents Saba Shahid, Alison Papadakis, Beth Kotchick, Carolyn Barry 35 Friends, family, or significant other? Whose fruit and vegetable intake best predicts young adult fruit and vegetable consumption? Dan Graham, Melissa Laska 45 Teen Dating Violence and Subsequent Health Outcomes in a National Sample of Youth Deinera Exner-Cortens, John Eckenrode, Emily Rothman 36 Predictors of Condom Use among Sexually Active Adolescents in Ghana John Baiden 46 Having a Friend in Adolescence Moderates Links between Peer Rejection and Life Satisfaction in Middle-Adulthood Donna Marion, Brett Laursen, Peter Zettergren, Lars Bergman 37 Sexuality and Religious Affiliation among Adolescents in Mexico Anna Nunn, Graciela Espinosa-Hernandez, Linda Halgunseth 47 The Role of Future Orientation, SelfEsteem, and Friendship Quality in Adolescent Mothers’ Tobacco Use 38 Associations between Sleep Disruptions and Emotional and Behavioral Adjustment among Youth: An Examination of Reciprocal Relations Mona El-Sheikh, Joseph Buckhalt, Ryan Kelly Laura Rose, Charissa Cheah 48 Peer Relationships and Psychological WellBeing in Immigrant-Background, Latino/a Adolescents Ravreet Cheema, Jourdan Munster, Sari Kosdon, Nathaly Pacheco-Santivanez, Claudia Castaneda, Janet Oh 39 Growth in depressive and conduct disorder symptoms from 6th to 9th grade interact to predict substance use problems in 12th grade Brian Wymbs, Carolyn McCarty, Ann Vander Stoep, Elizabeth McCauley 49 Positive and Negative Affect During ParentAdolescent Interactions: Associations With Adolescents’ Conflict Resolution Daniëlle Van der Giessen, Susan Branje, Wim Meeus 40 Neighborhood and Peer Influences on Marijuana, Alcohol, and Other Drug Use in a High Risk Sample 71 50 Adolescents' Social Status Goals: Relations to Social Status Insecurity and Behaviors Yan Li, Michelle Wright race/ethnicity on youth mental and physical health: The mediating role of precocious life events Ryan Lott, Kas Wickrama 51 Hierarchical Versus Egalitarian Cliques: The Role of Status Distribution Between and Within Cliques in Prosociality and Aggression Kim Pattiselanno, Jan Kornelis Dijkstra, Christian Steglich, Wilma Vollebergh, Rene Veenstra 60 Mediating Effect of Cognitive SelfRegulation between Maternal Depression and Child Depression Eun Hye Hur, Xin Feng 61 The Role of Mood Reactivity to Daily Interpersonal Events in the onset of Adolescent Depression Joanna Herres, Roger Kobak, Stevie Grassetti, Joseph Tan 52 Childhood Relational Aggression and Trajectories of Depression from Late Childhood to Adolescence: Moderating Effects of Gender and Popularity Erin Shoulberg 62 Predictors of Resiliency Among Homeless Emerging Adults Angie Lippman, Sanna Thompson, Tiffany Ryan 53 The Role of Peer Clique Status and WithinClique Hierarchy in Victimization by Peers Megan Kinal, Lynne Zarbatany, Lisa Boyko, Wendy Ellis, Xinyin Chen 63 Sibling Influences on the Development of Empathy in Early Adolescence Anna Solmeyer, Chun Bun Lam, Susan McHale 54 The Nature of Romantic Relationships Among Late Adolescents and the Association With First-Year University Adjustment Melinda Harper, Christine Allegretti 64 Trajectories of Cannabis Use and Anxiety During the Transition from Adolescence to Young Adulthood Cornelia Zeisser, Kara Thompson, Bonnie Leadbeater, Timothy Stockwell, Vincenza Gruppuso 55 State and Trait Mindfulness Relate to Different Aspects of Young Couples’ Affective Experience Before and After Conflict Loren Bengston, Taylor O'Holleran, Karon Volk, Erica Barton, Robin Hertz, Heidemarie Laurent 65 Adolescent First-Time Offenders’ Perspectives on the Campus Corps Intervention Program April Thomas, Shelley Haddock, Toni Zimmerman, Lindsey Weiler, Jen Krafchick, Sarah Rudisil 56 Late Adolescent Romantic Relationships as a Mediator of the Intergenerational Transmission of Parenting Quality Lee Raby, Paloma Hesemeyer, Rebecca Shlafer, Jamie Lawler, W Andrew Collins 66 Experimental Trial Demonstrates Positive Effects of Equine Assisted Intervention on Child Social Competence Patricia Pendry, Stephanie Roeter 57 Moderating Effect of Teacher-Student Relationships in the Relationship Between effortful Control, Parent-Child Conflict, and Misconduct Ming-Te Wang, Jacquelynne Eccles, Maureen Brinkworth 67 Positive Youth Development: Exploring Youth Voice and Homelessness Brooke Nott 68 The Relation between Observed Violence, Beliefs about Aggression, and Aggressive Behavior in Adolescents Rebecca Schulman, Michael Sheehan, Malcolm Watson 58 An Investigation of the Role of Executive Function in Adolescent Depression Chrystal Vergara-Lopez, Hector LopezVergara, Craig Colder 59 The influence of primary caregiver relationship status history and 72 69 A New Perspective on Hostile Attributions: Effects of Adding Animation and Narration Components Melissa Kunimatsu, Monica Marsee, Katherine Lau, Greg Fassnacht 79 Adolescent Narrative Identity Development in Relation to Age, Gender, SES, and Lay Theories Sarah Morrison-Cohen, Kate McLean 80 Parent’s influence on the Identity Development of Swedish Emerging Adults Maria Wängqvist, Ann Frisén 70 Developmental trajectories of delinquency and associated risk and protective factors Joanna Sue, Wendy Craig, Shahriar Khan, Kelly Petrunka 81 Parental Enculturation as a Mediator in the Relations between Parents’ Ethnic Orientation and Adolescents’ Ethnic Identity Tina Su, Catherine Costigan 71 Emotional Expressivity in Urban Adolescent Boys: Impacts of Policing of Masculinity and Other Interpersonal Events on Disclosure Christopher Reigeluth, Alisha Pollastri, Esteban Cardemil, Michael Addis 82 Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Identity Profiles: Relations with Youth Dating Outcomes Matthew Page, Hallie Bregman, Kristin Lindahl, Neena Malik 72 The Uses of Worry and Anger: What Adolescents Learn from Emotional Episodes in Community After-School Programs Natalie Rusk, Reed Larson 83 Adolescents’ versus Parents’ Interest in Social Technologies: Implications for Development of the Family Expert Role Bethany Blair, Anne Fletcher, Erin Gaskin 73 Viewing Television Disaster Coverage and Adolescent’s Versus Children’s Stress Reactions Carl Weems, Brandon Scott, Donice Banks, Rebecca Graham 84 Communication Technology in Adolescent Relationships and Identity Development Megan Smith, Betty-Ann Cyr, Steven Berman 74 Adolescents’ Ingroup Bias: Gender and Status Differences in Adolescents’ Preference for the Ingroup Kelly Lynn Mulvey, Aline Hitti, Shelby Cooley, Dominic Abrams, Adam Rutland, Jamie Ott, Melanie Killen Friday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm (Event 3-045) Invited Views by Two East Ballroom Salon B Friday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 75 Creating Meaning, Shaping Selves: Meaning Making and Self-Integration in Adolescent Narratives Trisha Weeks, Monisha Pasupathi 3-045. Globalization and Adolescent Health 76 Interactions Between Parental Attachment and Sociability: Predicting Prosocial Behaviors Toward Generalized and Familiar Others Meredith McGinley Moderator: Xinyin Chen, Graduate School of Education, University of Pennsylvania Speakers: 1. Guillermo Bernal, Institute for Psychological Research, University of Puerto Rico 2. Robert Wm. Blum, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 77 Social and Emotional Competence in Sixth Grade Predicts Academic Achievement One Year Later Eva Oberle, Kimberly Schonert-Reichl (continued) 78 Impact of religious social support on externalizing behavior outcomes for African American young adults Rachel Ploskonka, Meredith Hope, Meredith McGinley 73 Technical Advisory Group of the Child and Adolescent Health Department as well as the Scientific and Technical Advisory Group of the Human Reproductive Program. He was awarded the Society for Adolescent Medicine’s Outstanding Achievement Award (1993) and was the recipient of the American Public Health Association’s Herbert Needleman Award “for scientific achievement and courageous advocacy” on behalf of children and youth. In 2010 he was awarded the Maternal and Child Health Bureau’s Vince Hutchins Award “…to a lifetime of distinguished service to improve the health of MCH populations.” Biography. Guillermo Bernal, Ph.D., is Professor of Psychology at the University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras Campus and Director of the Institute for Psychological Research. His work has focused on research, training, and research, and the development of mental health services responsive to ethnocultural groups. He has published over 140 journal articles and chapters and six books. His current work is on the efficacy of parent interventions in the treatment of depression in Latino adolescents. A primary area of work is in conducting randomized clinical trials on culturally adapted treatments for depression with Puerto Rican adolescents. He is a contributor to the dialogue on cultural adaptations of EBTs and their relevance to minorities. Since 1992, his team has generated evidence on the efficacy of culturally adapted CBT and IPT, carried out translations and development of instruments, and published on factors associated to vulnerability of depression. Also his framework of cultural adaptation serves as a guide to researchers. Bernal is a Fellow of APA Divisions 45, 12, and 17. He has received numerous awards. He has served on the editorial board of 16 journals including Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology and is he is Associate Editor for Research for Family Process. (Event 3-045.5) Paper Discussion Symposium East Ballroom Salon C Friday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 3-045.5. Integrating Evidence: Mixed Methods Research on Adolescent Transitions and Interventions Chair: Emily Ozer Discussant: Thomas S. Weisner Mixed Methods for Assessing Intervention Quality in School Settings Emily Ozer Getting to Work: Mixed Methods Evidence on Employment Preparation Among Youth with Disabilities Valerie Leiter Disconnection as process and status: Using multiple methods to explore the transition to adulthood for low-income young men Kevin Roy Biography. Robert Wm. Blum, M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D., is the William H. Gates, Sr. Professor and Chair of the Department of Population, Family and Reproductive Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. He has edited two books, and has written nearly 250 journal articles, book chapters, and special reports. In July 2007, Dr. Blum was named the Director of the Johns Hopkins Urban Health Institute. He is a Past-President of the Society for Adolescent Medicine, has served on the American Board of Pediatrics, was a charter member of the Sub-Board of Adolescent Medicine, is a past chair of the Alan Guttmacher Institute Board of Directors, and served as chair of the National Academy of Sciences Committee on Adolescent Health and Development. In 2006, The National Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Medicine elected Dr. Blum into membership. He is a consultant to The World Bank, the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), UNICEF, and the World Health Organization where he has served on the (Event 3-046) Roundtable East Meeting 1 Friday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 3-046. Transformational Research Through University and Non-Profit Partnerships Moderator: M. Deborah Bialeschki Panelists: Suzanne Le Menestrel, David DuBois, Michael Conn 74 (Event 3-047) Emerging Scholar Roundtable East Meeting 12 Friday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm (Event 3-049) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 14 Friday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 3-047. Emerging Scholars' Event Early Career Grant Writing 3-049. Putting Adolescent Sexuality in Context: The Impact of Norms, Resources, and Trauma Moderator: LeShawndra Price Panelists: LeShawndra Price, National Institute of Mental Health, US National Institutes of Health Anna Riley, Center for Scientific Review, National Institutes of Health Aria Davis Crump, National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health Cheryl Boyce, National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health Kathy Etz, National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health Valerie Maholmes, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health Julia Zehr, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health Chair: Laina Y. Bay-Cheng Slut talks: Social context complexities in adolescent girls’ fellatio narratives Deborah Tolman, April Burns, Stephanie Anderson “That’s not what I was taught at home”: Perspectives on Sexual Pleasure from Young Adults Born In and Outside of the U.S. Sara McClelland When Agency is Not Enough: Sexual Experiences of Girls in Foster Care Laina Bay-Cheng, Nicole Fava Supporting Adolescents’ Sexual Rights and Well-Being: A Call for Trauma-Informed Sexuality Education Nicole Fava, Laina Bay-Cheng Friday, 3:30 pm - 5:00 pm (Event 3-048) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 13 Friday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm (Event 3-051) Poster Session 8 Exhibit Hall B Friday, 3:30 pm - 5:00 pm 3-048. Observations of Friends’ Conversations: Implications for Adolescent Adjustment Chair: Rebecca Schwartz-Mette Discussant: Mitchell J. Prinstein A Dynamic Analysis of “Coercive Joining” in Adolescent Friendships in the Cascading Progression to Young Adult Serious Violence Thomas Dishion, Mark Van Ryzin The Nature of Co-Ruminators’ Conversations Amanda Rose, Rebecca Schwartz-Mette, Rhiannon Smith, Gary Glick ‘Fat Talk’ Among Friends: A Preliminary Study of the Influence of Weight and Appearance Talk within Adolescent Female Dyads Whitney Guerry, Diana Rancourt, Lauren Danzi, Carissa Chambers, Mitchell Prinstein 75 1 Pubertal Development Mediates Sex Differences in Selective Attention Elissa Hamlat, Richard Liu, Kim Goldstein, Olga Obraztsova, Jonathan Stange, Lindsey Matt, Denise LaBelle, Lyn Abramson, Lauren Alloy 2 Ninth Grade Math Students’ Beliefs - Can They Be Changed? Angela Bush-Richards, Kristin Harvey, Lesley Leach, Cynthia Schneider 3 When Is Ingroup Preference Not Prejudice? Adolescents' Evaluations of Social Groups Shelby Cooley, Kelly Lynn Mulvey, Aline Hitti, Dominic Abrams, Adam Rutland, Melanie Killen 4 Concordance between youth self-reported and documented maltreatment and how it relates to internalizing symptoms and selfesteem Julie Gravener, Fred Rogosch, Dante Cicchetti, Sheree Toth 5 Openness in Adoption across Time as a Function of Birth Mother Age David Martin, Jenae Neidershier, Leslie Leve, Daniel Shaw, Laura Scaramella, David Reiss 6 7 8 9 14 Parents’ Differential Treatment as a Family Process: Links between Favoritism and Adolescents’ Delinquent Behaviors Alexander Jensen, Umadevi Senguttuvan, Shawn Whiteman 15 Rural Compared to Urban Home Community Settings as Predictors of FirstYear Students' Adjustment to University Megan Ames, Maxine Wintre 16 After-School Programs and Marketable Job Skills for High School Students Kendra Alexander, Barton Hirsch Emotional Parentification during the Leaving Home Transition and Risk for Later Anxiety and Depression in Children of Alcoholics Kaitlin Bountress, Laurie Chassin 17 The Application of Instrumental Variable Estimation Analysis in Examining Developmental Outcomes Associated with Extracurricular Activity Participation Chara Price Ethnic Differences in Preadolescent Perceptions of Maternal Use of Conditional Regard David Bond, John Coffey, Kizzann Ramsook, Melanie Fox, Patricia Smiley, Jessica Borelli 18 Youths’ Engagement in Motivational Processes through Written Reflection: Sources of Personal Connection in Organized Activities Nicole Ja, Laura-Nicole Sisson, Molly Glantz Evaluating Information Management Strategies: Parent Versus Teen Justifications Wendy Rote, Judi Smetana 19 Intellectual Functioning and Academic Achievement in Children with Tourette syndrome Amy Veenstra, Alexandra Manolis, William Guy, Michael Behen Antecedents of Parental Monitoring During Middle Childhood and Adolescence Sarah Racz, Robert McMahon 20 Including Fathers in the Picture: A Metaanalysis of Father and Mother Involvement and Adolescent’s Academic Outcomes Sung won Kim 10 A developmental perspective to adolescent substance use: Risk and Protective factors Assaf Oshri, Mandi Burnette, Jonathan Tubman 21 Academic risks associated with emerging adults seeking the college experience Nadia Sorkhabi, Amy Strage, Lindsay Tanner 11 Fathering Adolescents: An Examination of the Effects of Fathers’ Warmth on Adolescents’ Academic and SocialEmotional Outcomes Marie-Anne Suizzo, Jason Rarick, Kadie Rackley, Paul Robbins, Karen Jackson 22 The School Belonging of Girls as a Function of Pubertal Development and Subjective Perception of Ethnic Diversity Jessica Morales, Sandra Graham 12 How Relevant are General Measures of Parental Involvement in Predicting Behavior-Specific Parent Engagement? Ellen Pinderhughes, Jason Bendezu, Sean Hurley, Arthur West, Robert McMahon 23 Gender specific test anxiety in the context of neuroticism and social relations in a German secondary school setting Frances Gottwald, Diana Raufelder, Danilo Jagenow 13 Maternal Age, Investment, and Parent-Child Conflict: A Mediational Test of the Terminal Investment Hypothesis Gabriel Schlomer, Jay Belsky 76 24 Adolescent Political Attitudes:Associations with Individual Beliefs, Civic Involvement, and Sources of Political Knowledge Kaitlyn Ferris, Elizabeth Yale, Aaron Metzger 35 General Parenting Styles and Parental Feeding Practices in Mexican American Families Carlos Penilla, Jeanne Tschann, Elena Flores, Cynthia de Groat, Steven Gregorich 26 The Prediction of Career Compromise in Adolescence Sarah Schmitt-Wilson, Marilyn Welsh 36 Effectiveness of Federally Funded Demonstration Projects Serving Pregnant and Parenting Teens Marni Kan, Olivia Ashley, Joel Hampton, Alicia Scott 27 African-American Adolescents’ Perceptions of Ethnic Socialization and Racial Socialization as Distinct Processes Julie Paasch-Anderson, Susie Lamborn 37 LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and questioning) Youth Perspectives of School-Based Sexuality Education Nick Winges-Yanez, Kris Gowen 28 Mexican-origin Youth’s Involvement in Housework from Late Adolescence to Young Adulthood: The Role of Gender and Culture Sue Rodriguez, Kimberly Updegraff, Susan McHale, Melissa Delgado, Adriana UmañaTaylor 38 Effects of Nicotine Dependence and Depressive Symptoms on Smoking Cessation: a Longitudinal Study Among Adolescents Charlotte Scherphof, Regina van den Eijnden, Zeena Harakeh, Marloes Kleinjan, Rutger Engels, Wilma Vollebergh 29 Perceived Discrimination and Psychological Distress Among Asian American Emerging Adults: The Moderating Role of Religious identity May Kim, Irene Park 40 Cognitive Errors and Emotion Dysregulation Moderate Relationship Between ParentTeen Conflict and Adolescent Substance Misuse William Rothenberg, Louis Cornejo, Adam Miller, Adam Walsh, Christianne EspositoSmythers 30 The Relation of Language Brokering Attitudes and Parent-Adolescent Closeness in Immigrant Latino Families Emile Tilghman-Osborne, Mayra BamacaColbert 31 The Association Between Sequences of Sexual Initiation and the Likelihood of Teen Pregnancy Bianka Reese, Abigail Haydon, Amy Herring, Carolyn Tucker-Halpern 41 Electronic Victimization and Adolescents’ Subsequent Academic Adjustment: The Moderating Role of Emotion Dysregulation Daryaneh Badaly, Brynn Kelly, David Schwartz 32 Supervision and Delinquency as Predictors of Harmful Alcohol Consumption Catherine Quinn, Kay Bussey 42 To Disclose or Not to Disclose Victimization? Factors Influencing the Disclosure of Cyber and Offline Relational Victimization to Parents Kay Bussey, Catherine Quinn 33 Protective Predictors of Alcohol Use Trajectories Among Canadian Aboriginal Youth Megan Ames, Jennine Rawana 43 Associations among Gender, Ethnicity, Attitudes, and Aggression: A Mediation Model Maya Zayat, Beth Kotchick, Alison Papadakis 34 Protective factors for aggression, violence, and delinquency among high-risk and gang-involved youth in San Salvador, El Salvador Christopher Salas-Wright, Rene Olate, Michael Vaughn 44 Peer Victimization as a Risk Factor for Dating and Sexual Violence Among Adolescent Girls Jennifer Livingston, Maria Testa, Kathleen Miller 77 45 Examination of Differential Predictors of Adolescent Dating Aggression Engagement Claire Oxtoby, John Grych 56 Latina Mother-Daughter Communication about Male Partner Relationships and Dating Violence Magali Bravo, Laura Romo 46 Similarity of Latino Friends across the Transition to Middle School Anne Sebanc, Jamie Slingluff, Stephanie Bergstrom, Christine Verduzco 57 Adolescent Alcohol Problems in Context: From Biological Vulnerability to Social Support Christi Culpepper, Katherine Kivisto, Deborah Welsh, Debora Baldwin, Sarah Fischer, Samantha Gray 47 Costs of Cross-Ethnic Friendships: Sociometric Nominations by Same-Ethnic Peers as a Function of Cross-Ethnic Friendship Rates Patrick Rock, Jaana Juvonen 58 Peer Victimization and Depressed Affect in Early Adolescents: The Mediating Role of Anxiety Marie-Eve Dubois, William Bukowski, Melissa Simard 48 Friendship Quality and Stability: A Person Centered Assessment Cody Hiatt, Brett Laursen, Karen Mooney, Kenneth Rubin, Dawn DeLay, Ashley Richmond, Shrija Dirghangi, Amy Hartl, Daniel Dickson 59 A Consideration of Self-report in Adolescents With ADHD Laura Connors, Maggie Toplak, Rosemary Tannock, Karen Ghelani, Umesh Jain 49 First Impressions: What Motivates Adolescents to Interact with Peers? Justin Caouette, Clinton Lee, Amanda Guyer 61 Profiles of Risk and Protective Factors in Ethnic Minority Low-Income Adolescents: A Cluster Analysis. Stephanie Ernestus, Hazel Prelow 50 Social Resource Control in the Adolescent Peer Group: Associations with Aggressive, Prosocial, and Withdrawn Behaviors Danielle Findley, Tiina Ojanen 62 Optimism and Coping as Predictors of Depressive Symptoms in Children of Depressed Parents Jennifer Potts, Susanna Crowell, Kelly Watson, Rex Forehand, Bruce Compas 52 Social and Physiological Moderators of the Association between Popularity Goals and Functions of Relational Aggression Erin Shoulberg, Dianna Murray-Close, Emily Mazzulla 63 The Impact of Transitions to Adulthood on Trajectories of Depression in Sexual Minority and Non-Sexual Minority Individuals in the Transition to Adulthood Sarah Kendig, Alexa Martin-Storey, Rob Crosnoe 53 Information Manipulation: Emerging Adults’ Romantic Relationship Quality and Disclosures to Family and Friends Jill Boelter, Timothy Loving, Benjamin Le, Rebecca Harmon, Carly Layfield 64 Differences Between Event and Memory of Event Maria Korogodsky 54 Technology as a Form of Dating Violence Among College Students Melissa Schnurr, Maggie DeLong 55 Specific Associations Between Trait Mindfulness Facets, Romantic Attachment, and Relationship Satisfaction Karon Volk, Erica Barton, Loren Bengston, Taylor O'Holleran, Robin Hertz, Heidemarie Laurent 78 65 The Family Check-Up in Public Middle School: Implications of a Family-Centered Intervention for Preventing Adolescent Depression Gregory Fosco, Mark Van Ryzin, Elizabeth Stormshak, Thomas Dishion 74 Pals, Problems, and Personality: The Moderating Role of Personality in Adolescents’ and Best Friends’ Delinquency Rongqin Yu, Susan Branje, Loes Keijsers, Wim Meeus 75 Assisting a Stranger: The Effects of SelfEsteem on Prosocial Behavior During Adolescence Ashley Fraser, Laura Padilla-Walker 66 Placement Disruption and Youth Adjustment among Former Foster Youth: The Moderating Role of Educational Stability Kelly Murphy, Tuppett Yates, Tiffany Berry 76 The Influence of Hostile Attribution on Adolescent Friendship Jealousy and Forgiveness Mairin Augustine, Deborah Laible, Tia Panfile 67 Gender Differences in the Relation Between Identity and Aggression Tia Kim, Annabella Gallagher 68 A longitudinal examination of socialcognitive processes: The stability of rejection sensitivity and rumination in highrisk youth Tania Bartolo, Marlene Moretti 77 Positive Touch, Temperament, and Gender in Predicting Adolescent Depression Rachel Chandley, Aaron Luebbe, Debora Bell 78 Exploring the Transition to Adulthood Between a Canadian and US Sample Karin Bartoszuk, Barbara Gfellner 69 Comparing Runaway and Non-runaway Adolescents’ Attitudes toward the Past, the Present, and the Future KrisAnn McBroom, Zena Mello, Frank Worrell 80 The Positive Implications of an Integrated Identity Among Asian Americans Jason Luu, Lisa Kiang 70 The Role of Co-Rumination and Emotion Regulation in Nonsuicidal Self-Injury: A Longitudinal Investigation Cynthia Erdley, Molly Adrian, Leslie Sim, Kendra Homan, Morgan Ames, Janice Zeman 81 The Positive Experiences of Openly Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgendered Students in a British Christian College Mark McCormack 82 The Impact of Advertising Literacy and Cognitive Development on Preadolescents’ Consumer Behavior Jessica Williams 71 Low Point Narratives and Their Relation to Emotional Adjustment in Emerging Adulthood: A Longitudinal Analysis Florence Mak, Michael Pratt, Tara Dumas, Susan Alisat 83 Adolescent Discretionary Time Management: Does Time Engaged in Social Networking Compete with Homework and Sleep? Lynette Vernon, Bonnie Barber, Kathryn Modecki 72 Maternal Warmth and Early Adolescents’ Adjustment: Mediation via Emotional Security Alberto Alegre, Mark Benson, Nuria PerezEscoda, Arantxa Ribot 84 Associations Among Social Goals, Classroom Engagement, and School Belonging During Early Adolescence Cheryl Ellerbrock, Sarah Kiefer 73 Implicit Measurement of Moral Identity in Relation to Late Adolescents’ Value Socialization, Moral Emotions, and Religiosity Megan Johnston, Amanda Sherman, Joan Grusec 79 Commentator: Stephen T. Russell, University of Arizona Panelist: Raija-Leena Punamäki, University of Tempere, Finland Friday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm (Event 3-052) Paper Discussion Symposium East Ballroom Salon A Friday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm Abstract. Traumatic experiences can seriously interfere with adolescent development and mental health. Fortunately, there is increasing research available on protective and healing processes that can be translated to help traumatized adolescents. They include social (e.g., disclosure and sharing), emotional (recognition and expression), neurophysiological (age-specific brain reorganization and stress management) and symbolic (dreaming and playing) processes. This presentation, first, reviews research findings that are relevant in tailoring effective interventions to enhance optimal development and mental health. Second, it shortly analyses the evidence-based and theory-based effectiveness of available interventions and treatments among war-affected adolescents (such as age-specific in-vivo of trauma rehearsal, narrative and symbolic techniques and psychoeducation). Third, it presents research findings of an intervention study among Palestinian children and youth (N=482) after a major war, focusing on emotional, cognitive and symbolic processes as mediating the possible intervention effectiveness. We discuss how to combine developmental and preventive science in working with war-affected youth. 3-052. The Adaptive Calibration Model: An evolutionally, life history approach to individual variation in stress responsivity. Chair: Jennie Noll The Adaptive Calibration Model of Stress Responsivity and Reproductive Strategy in Adolescence Bruce Ellis, Marco Del Giudice, Elizabeth Shirtcliff Adaptive Patterns of Stress Responsivity: Preliminary Empirical Results Marco Del Giudice, Bruce Ellis, J. Benjamin Hinnant, Mona El-Sheikh Curvilinear Relations among Childhood Exposure to Interparental Conflict and Cortisol Reactivity in Late Adolescence: Implications for Mental Health Linda Luecken, Melissa Hagan, Danielle Roubinov Biography. Raija-Leena Punamäki is a psychologist and professor in University of Tampere, Finland. Her research focuses on child and adolescent development and mental health in traumatic conditions, especially in war and military violence. The research topics include symbolic processes (dreaming, fantasy and playing), family dynamics and attachment development. The main aim is to translate the knowledge of adolescent emotional, symbolic, social and cognitive development into evidence- and theory-based treatments for young trauma survivors. In the field of war trauma, she works in close cooperation with Palestinian and Kurdish colleagues, in research, professional training and interventions. In the Nordic and Finnish context, she studies social, emotional, psychophysiological impacts of ICT (Information and communication technology) on adolescent development, and predictors of suicide, drug abuse and school violence among adolescents. She is an active member of the (Event 3-054) Roundtable East Meeting 1 Friday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 3-054. Entrepreneurship as a Pathway to Positive Youth Development Moderator: Richard M. Lerner Panelists: William Damon, Kendall Bronk, Timothy Reilly, Megan Mueller (Event 3-056) Invited Roundtable East Meeting 11 Friday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 3-056. SRA International Fellow What Should Change and Why in Preventive Interventions for Traumatized Adolescents? Cognitive, Emotional, and Symbolic Processes Moderator: Doran French, Purdue University 80 Finnish Psychologist for Social Responsibility, and the Board Member of the Finnish Academy of Science and Letters, of the Research on Family Relations, of the National Doctoral Program, and of the Nordic Network for Research on Refugee Children. (Event 3-057) Emerging Scholar Roundtable East Meeting 12 Friday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm Kayla de la Haye, Harold Green, David Kennedy, Michael Pollard, Joan Tucker Social Selection and Smoking Initiation in Middle School Friendship Networks Harold Green, Kayla de la Haye, Joan Tucker, Elizabeth D'Amico, Mariana Horta (Event 3-059) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 14 Friday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 3-057. Federal Research Opportunities and Funding Priorities 3-059. The Contexts and Consequences of Co-occurring Substance Use and Sexual Behavior Moderator: LeShawndra Price Panelists: LeShawndra Price, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health Sarah Oberlander, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, US Department of Health and Human Services Suzanne Le Menestrel, National Institute of Food and Agriculture, US Department of Agriculture Sarah Bacon, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Cheryl Boyce, National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health Julia Zehr, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health Chair: Eva S. Lefkowitz Discussant: Lucia F. O'Sullivan Drinking Together: Substance Use Concordance, Sexual Behavior, and Infidelity in Adolescent Couples Deborah Welsh, Nancy Darling, Katherine Kivisto, Teresa Preddy, Christi Culpepper, Samantha Gray, Nicholas Bishop Parties, Drugs, and High School Hook-ups: Mexican American and White Descriptions of Adolescent Romance Lela Williams, Heidi Adams Perceived Links Between Drinking and Sex: Associations With Gender, Sexual Experience, and Heavy Drinking Eva Lefkowitz, Nicole Morgan, Jennifer Maggs (Event 3-058) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 13 Friday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm (Event 3-060) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 15 Friday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 3-058. Dynamic Network-Based Models of Substance Use: Recent Results Using SIENA 3-060. "From whom does our help come?" The impact of religious social support and engagement on black adolescent and emerging adult psychosocial outcomes Chair: John Light Discussant: Christian Steglich Time Scales and Cascading Dynamics of Alcohol Use in School-Wide Networks of Early Adolescent Youth Julie Rusby, John Light Peers and Pot: Selection and Influence Mechanisms Associated With Marijuana use in Adolescent Friendship Networks Chair: Pamela Martin (continued) 81 (Event 3-062) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 18 Friday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm Religious engagement, social support, and self-efficacy on African and Caribbean American young adults' predicted future goals Meredith Hope, Jacqueline Mattis, Meredith McGinley Religious social upport and engagement protecting against depression in black young adults: Considering stressor chronicity Cynthia Pierre, Meredith Hope, Meredith McGinley, Corinn Elmore, Jacqueline Mattis Religiosity and Volunteerism among African American Emerging Adults: A Mediational Analysis Jacqueline Mattis, Meredith Hope, Meredith McGinley, Lawanna Kimbro, Ashlee Yates 3-062. Positive Developmental Outcomes: Linking Teaching Practices to Latino Middle School Students’ Motivation and Achievement Chair: Karen R. Strobel Discussant: Robert Roeser Changes Over Time in Perceived Teacher Mastery Practices and Self-Efficacy in Math: A Focus on Latino Middle School Students Graciela Borsato, Karen Strobel Linking Caring Teaching Practices to Latino Middle School Students’ Efficacy and Achievement in Math Karen Strobel, Graciela Borsato Promoting Motivation and Achievement Through Teaching Practices that Capitalize on Latino Students’ Strengths Noah Borrero, Diane Lee, Amado Padilla (Event 3-061) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 17 Friday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 3-061. Pathways to Resilience for Sexual Minority Youth: Individual and School-Based Factors that Mediate and Moderate School Harassment (Event 3-063) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 19 Friday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm Chair: Alexa Martin-Storey Discussant: Russell B. Toomey Creating a Safe and Affirming Learning Environment for LGBT Youth: The Role of LGBT-Inclusive Curriculum Joseph Kosciw Does the Quality of Student-Teacher Relations and School Climate Promote Positive Perceptions of High-School for Brazilian Youth who Suffer Homophobic Discrimination? Josafá Da Cunha, Lidia Weber Harassment due to gender non-conformity and depression: The moderating role of selfcontinuity Alexa Martin-Storey, Holly Recchia, Matteo Peretti 3-063. Factors Affecting Susceptibility to Peer Influence on Risky Behavior: The Role of Puberty, Situational Context, and Parenting Chair: Sylvie Mrug Discussant: Marlene Sandstrom Pubertal Timing and Tempo as Moderators of Peer Influence on Antisocial Behavior in Adolescent Boys and Girls Sylvie Mrug Influence of Peers on the Calculation of Risk in a Probabilistic Gambling Task Ashley Smith, Jason Chein, Alexander Weigard, Laurence Steinberg Can Parents’ Peer Management Reduce the Selection or Influence of Norm-Breaking Peers? Testing the Question With Network Data Lauree Tilton-Weaver, William Burk, Margaret Kerr, Håkan Stattin 82 (Event 3-064) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 2 Friday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm (Event 3-067) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 8 Friday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 3-064. Insights into the Effects of the KiVa Antibullying Program: Generalizability, Mediation, and Moderation 3-067. Prospective Effects of Childhood Maltreatment on Adolescent Internalizing Psychopathology Chair: Christina Salmivalli Effects of the KiVa AntiBullying Program on Rates of Cyberbullying and Cybervictimization among Early Adolescents Anne Williford, Christian Elledge, Kathryn DePaolis, Aaron Boulton, Todd Little, Christina Salmivalli Reduced Rates of Bullying in KiVa Schools: What Student-Level and Contextual Mechanisms Account for the Intervention Effects? Silja Saarento, Christina Salmivalli Implementation of Kiva: Classroom- and School-level Predictors and Association with the Outcomes Obtained Anne Haataja, Marinus Voeten, Christina Salmivalli Chair: Dante Cicchetti The Contribution of Childhood Maltreatment to Internalizing Symptoms During Adolescence: An Ecological-Organizational Perspective Megan Flynn, Dante Cicchetti, Fred Rogosch Direct and Moderated Predictions to Late Adolescent Internalizing Symptoms From Emotionally Stressful Family Contexts Joanna Chango, Ann Spilker, Joseph Allen Child Emotional Abuse as a Vulnerability to Depressive Symptoms Following Recent Stressful Life Events: A Longitudinal Design Benjamin Shapero, Shimrit Black, Richard Liu, Joshua Klugman, Rachel Bender, Lauren Alloy, Lyn Abramson (Event 3-068) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 9 Friday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm (Event 3-065) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 3 Friday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 3-068. The Co-occurrence of Depressive Symptoms and Conduct Problems during Adolescence 3-065. The multifaceted links between adolescents’ ethnic identity and their structural, social, and psychological integration Chair: Misaki N. Natsuaki Discussant: Arin M. Connell Depressive Symptoms and Externalizing Behaviors Across Adolescence: Cooccurrence and Associations with Suicide Risk David Kerr, J. Mark Eddy, Wendy Reinke Depressive Symptom Trajectories among Girls in the Juvenile Justice System: Findings from an RCT of Multidimensional Treatment Foster Care Gordon Harold, David Kerr, Mark Van Ryzin, Kimberly Rhodes, Leslie Leve Chair: Barry H. Schneider Social Identity on top of Social Contexts: Job-search Behavior in Immigrant Vocational Training Graduates Pieter Baay Adaptation in an acculturative context is a family matter: Adolescents’, mothers’ and fathers’ attitudes and second-generation adolescents’ well-being Colette Sabatier Domain-Specific Exploration of the Adjustment of Adolescent Immigrants to Spain as a Function of Ethnic Identity Barry Schneider, Ibis Alvarez-Valdivia (continued) 83 Examination of dual growth of depressive symptoms and externalizing problems during early adolescence using a parallel process model Isaac Rhew, Kathryn Monahan, Elizabeth McCauley, Ann Vander Stoep hundreds of interviews conducted throughout adolescence with Black, Latino, White, and Asian American boys, Niobe Way’s research suggests that we have been telling ourselves a false story about boys, friendships, and human nature. Boys’ descriptions of their male friendships sound more like “something out of Love Story than The Lord of the Flies.” Yet in late adolescence, boys believe they have to “man up” and “mature” by becoming stoic and independent. Vulnerable emotions, intimate friendships, and expressing feelings are, according to the boys, for girls and gay boys. “No homo” becomes their mantra. These findings are troublesome, given what we know from decades of social science research about the links between friendships and health, and even longevity. Rather than a “boy crisis,” Dr. Way finds that boys are experiencing a “crisis of connection” due to the fact that they live in a culture where basic human needs and capacities are given a sex (female) and a sexuality (gay) and thus discouraged for those who are neither. Way argues that the solution to this crisis lies with exposing the inaccuracies of our gender and racial stereotypes and fostering intimate friendships and fundamental human skills. Friday, 5:30 pm - 6:30 pm (Event 3-069) Presidential Address Exhibit Hall A Friday, 5:30 pm - 6:30 pm 3-069. Is Growing Up in the United States Good for Boys’ Health? Chair: Reed Larson Speaker: Niobe Way, SRA President, New York University Abstract. In an empirically grounded challenge to our stereotypes about boys and men, Dr. Way’s longitudinal research over the past twenty years reveals the intense intimacy among teenage boys especially during early and middle adolescence. Boys from diverse ethnic and racial groups not only share their deepest secrets and feelings with their closest male friends, they claim that without them they would go “wacko.” Yet as boys grow older, they become distrustful, lose their friendships, and feel isolated and alone. This loss is evident at the same time in development that the suicide rate, according to national data, goes up dramatically for boys and becomes five times the rate of girls. Drawing from Friday, 6:30 pm - 8:00 pm (Event 3-070) Reception Exhibit Hall A 3-070. Presidential Reception - All Attendees Welcome! All attendees are encouraged to attend this social event! Connect with old and new friends and colleagues as you enjoy refreshments. Cash bars will be available. 84 SATURDAY Saturday, 8:30 am - 10:00 am Biography. Dr. Cigdem Kagitcibasi is Professor of Psychology at Koc University, Istanbul, Turkey. She has been a Visiting Professor at Duke University, Columbia University, Harvard University, and the University of California, Berkeley. She also has been a fellow of the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study (NIAS). She is a Founding Member of the Turkish Academy of Sciences. She served as the Vice-President of the International Union of Psychological Science, and of the International Social Science Council. Dr. Kagitcibasi was elected the first woman President and subsequently Honorary Fellow of the International Association for Cross-Cultural Psychology. She has received awards from American Psychological Association, International Association of Applied Psychology, and European Developmental Psychology Association, among others. Her publications in English include 13 books (authored, co-authored, edited, co-edited), and 150 journal articles and book chapters. Dr. Kagitcibasi focuses on human development, self, and family in cultural context. Her work spans both theoretical and applied spheres, best represented in her recent book, Family, Self and Human Development Across Cultures: Theory and Applications (2007). Other recent volumes are Understanding Social Psychology Across Cultures (2006, with Smith & Bond), and Families Across Cultures (2006, with Georgas et al.). (Event 4-001) Invited Keynote Address East Ballroom Salon B Saturday, 8:30 am - 10:00 am 4-001. Roberta Grodberg Simmons Prize Lecture--Autonomy-Relatedness Dynamics in Adolescence: What Is Optimal? Chair: Thomas S. Weisner, Departments of Psychiatry & Anthropology, University of California-Los Angeles Speaker: Cigdem Kagitcibasi, Psychology, Koc University, Istanbul, Turkey Abstract. To develop a global understanding of adolescence and to promote well-being, we need to take into consideration environmental trends. In particular there is a need to recognize fundamental shifts from rural to urban environments involving increasing similarities in life styles. What are the implications of this phenomenon for culturally relative versus universalist perspectives on human development? And pursuing this inquiry further, what are the implications for establishing standards or benchmarks regarding what constitutes healthy adolescent development? I submit that notwithstanding socio-cultural diversity, we can talk about a model of healthy adolescent development and endeavor to work toward it without succumbing to cultural relativism. Achieving a balanced autonomy-relatedness dynamics in adolescence is such an optimal model. This is because autonomy and relatedness are basic human needs. Their coexistence promises to lead to a more optimal self construal. What constitutes a “balanced” co-existence would again need to take into account contextual factors, especially cultural norms and values. Especially applied work has to be contextual. Recent research and theory provide us with valuable insights in such an endeavor. As cases in point, I will discuss my “autonomous-related self” theory and intervention research toward promoting healthy development of self. (Event 4-002) Roundtable East Meeting 1 Saturday, 8:30 am - 10:00 am 4-002. The Limits of Adolescent Privacy: Distinguishing Between Responsible Supervision and Parental Invasion Moderator: Skyler T. Hawk Panelists: Judi Smetana, Lauree Tilton-Weaver, Loes Keijsers, Patricio Cumsille 85 (Event 4-002.5) Roundtable East Meeting 12 Saturday, 8:30 am - 10:00 am 4-002.5. Youth-Adult Partnerships for Institutional and Community Change: Theoretical and Methodological Issues Moderator: Ben Kirshner Panelists: Emily Ozer, Valerie Futch, Julie Petrokubi (Event 4-003) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 10 Saturday, 8:30 am - 10:00 am 4-003. The Integrated Adolescent Emotion System: Concordance across Physiological, Behavioral, and Experiential Domains Chair: Sheila Crowell Concordance and discordance between selfreport and psychophysiological assessments across several discrete emotion elicitation tasks Sheila Crowell, Daniel Bride, Chloe Skidmore, Caitlin O'Connor, Candace Allred, Jeanine Stefanucci Patterns among Emotional Experience, Arousal, and Expression in Adolescence Dianna Lanteigne, Tom Hollenstein, Jessica Lougheed, Jennifer Eastabrook The Dynamics of Social Stress over Time: Physiological, Behavioral, and Psychological Trajectories of Emotional Responsivity Tom Hollenstein, Jennifer Eastabrook, Dianna Lanteigne, Jessica Lougheed Childhood and Adolescent Predictors of Dating Violence Kerry Makin-Byrd, Karen Bierman, John Coie, Ken Dodge, Mark Greenberg, John Lochman, Robert McMahon, Ellen Pinderhughes Physical Dating Violence Trajectories from Middle to High School: The Healthy Teens Study Pamela Orpinas, Heidi Ehrenreich, Hsien-Lin Hsieh, Summar Corley, Xiao Song, Patricia Reeves The Impact of Collective Efficacy on Risks for Adolescents’ Dating Violence Perpetration Melissa Schnurr, Brenda Lohman The Interplay between Stress and Psychological Intimate Partner Violence over Time for Young At-Risk Couples Joann Shortt, Deborah Capaldi, Hyoun Kim, Stacey Tiberio Saturday, 10:00 am - 11:30 am (Event 4-005) Poster Session 9 Exhibit Hall B Saturday, 10:00 am - 11:30 am (Event 4-004) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 15 Saturday, 8:30 am - 10:00 am 4-004. Understanding Longitudinal Precursors of Adolescent and Young Adult Dating Violence Perpetration and Victimization Chair: Brenda J. Lohman 86 1 A Comparison between Two Adolescent Self-Report Measures of Pubertal Timing: What happens when there is an explicit comparison with peers? Rubab Arim, Jennifer Shapka 2 Fuzzy-Trace Theory Explains Effects of Impulsivity on Adolescent Risk-Taking Behaviors: A Gist for Risk Adrienne Romer, Valerie Reyna, Seth Pardo 3 Adolescents’ Perceived Mattering to Friends and the Role of Peer-valued Characteristics Jovita Vytasek, Sheila Marshall 4 Longitudinal Associations between Youths’ Reactions to Childhood Sexual Abuse and Subsequent Strategies for Processing Abuse Experiences Valerie Simon, Candice Feiring, Charles Cleland 5 Double Liminality: Navigating Misaligned Services and Inventing Transitions to Adulthood for Youth with Disabilities Emilie Gladstone 16 Practicing Continuous Quality Improvement in Afterschool: The Complications of Coupling Sarah Phillips, Tom Akiva 6 Family Assessment: Use of Family-Based Measures in Clinical Practice with Youth and Families Catherine McKeown, Scott Ronis 7 Why Does Adolescents' Disclosure to Parents Enhance Adolescents' Well-being? Cecilia Cheung, Lili Qin, Eva Pomerantz 17 How Do I Engage Thee? Let Me Count the Ways: A Multidimensional Measure of Youth Engagement Heather Ramey, Linda Rose-Krasnor, Shannon Gadbois, Anne Bowker, Leanne Findlay 8 Ethnic Differences in the Anatomy of Support Networks across the Transition into Adulthood Shu-Sha Guan, Andrew Fuligni 9 Family emotional engagement as a mediator: Exploring the link between maternal depression and preadolescents’ dysregulation Erin Albrecht, Erika Lunkenheimer, Ann Shields 18 Prospective Linkages Among Violence Exposure, Erratic Sleep Patterns, and Academic Achievement in Middle School Youth Stephen Lepore, Wendy Kliewer 19 Community Violence, School Attitudes, and Academic Performance Larissa Borofsky, Gayla Margolin, Pamella Oliver 20 Academic and Racial Socialization Profiles: Associations with African American Adolescents’ Academic Outcomes Isha Metzger, Shauna Cooper, Charity Brown 10 Family Structure and the Onset of Sexual Activity in Adolescent Girls -A Study in Accra, Ghana Esther Malm 21 Coping as Part of Motivational Resilience in School: A New Measure of Families, Proportions, and Profiles of Academic Coping Ellen Skinner, Jennifer Pitzer 11 Parent Disclosure as a Predictor of Adolescents' Empathy and Prosocial Behavior Maria Chaparro, Joan Grusec 22 Can Respect in School Moderate the Relationship Between Latino Youths’ Environmental Stressors and High-Risk Behaviors? Kayleigh Welsh, Richard Nunally, Linda Zelaya, Scott Plunkett 12 Predictors of Change in Maternal Psychological Control Across the Middle School Years Cayley Velazquez, Alexandra Loukas, Keryn Pasch 13 Language Gap, Communication, and Parent-Adolescent Relationships in Asian Immigrant Families David Choi, Elizabeth Lin, Lisseth RojasFlores 23 The Relationship between Teachers' childhood parental bonding experiences and their Reactions to a Student's Request Susanna Pallini, Roberto Baiocco, Cecilia Pace 14 Sibling Influences on Adolescents’ Eating, Weight, and Health Attitudes Umadevi Senguttuvan, Alexander Jensen, Shawn Whiteman 24 Emerging Citizenship: Creating Spaces for Young Changemakers Jill Hayhurst, John Hunter, Sarah Kafka 25 Gender Typicality in Early Adolescence: Relationships Between Atypicality and Peer Social Acceptance and Popularity Jennifer Jewell, Christia Brown 15 The Ties that Bind: Utilizing Social Networks to Investigate Career Paths in Rural Areas Patricia Dyk, Jessica Kropczynski 87 26 Project SEARCH for Adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorders: Increasing Competitive Employment Opportunities Post-High school Staci Carr, Carol Schall, Jennifer McDonough 36 Influences of Parent and Parent-Adolescent Relationship Traits on Sexual Trajectories from Adolescence through Young Adulthood Emily Cheshire, Yasuo Miyazaki, Christine Kaestle 37 Female Adolescents' Internet Pornography Use and Sexual Behavior Megan Maas, Eva Lefkowitz 27 Transmission of Cultural Values among Mexican American Families: Parents’, Adolescents’, and Emerging Adults’ Familism Values Norma Perez-Brena, Kimberly Updegraff, Adriana Umaña-Taylor 38 Recanting of Cigarette Smoking in Adolescent Girls: Association with Parent and Peer Smoking Lisa Sontag-Padilla, Stephanie Pabst, Justin Bates, Renate Houts, Lorah Dorn 28 Age Norms and Timing of Adolescents’ First Sexual Intercourse in 18 European Countries: Are there Differences by Gender? Ping Ma, Aubrey Madkour, Emmanuelle Godeau, Saoirse nic Gabhainn, Tilda Farhat, Carolyn Tucker-Halpern 39 Substance Use, Depression, and Stress: A Retrospective Analysis of their Relations and Trajectories across Adolescence Amy Blunck, Eric Amsel, Leigh Shaw 40 Associations Between Early Adolescent Caffeine Consumption and Use of Other Substances, Sensation Seeking, and Conduct Disorder Elisa Miyake, Naomi Marmorstein 29 The Effects of Perceptions of Discrimination During the Transition to College Henry Hinkle, Nina Mounts, Tracy Walters 30 Relationship between parent-adolescent differences in perceived family functioning and individual distress in Korean American immigrant families Sumie Okazaki, Nancy Abelmann 41 Electronic Victimization, Social Rejection, and Unpopularity in Adolescent Peer Groups Daryaneh Badaly, Brynn Kelly, David Schwartz 42 The Prevalence of Bullying in Urban and Rural High Schools in the Philippines Liane Alampay, Ma. Elizabeth Macapagal 31 Body Image and Sexuality among Latino Adolescents Raquel Halfond, Rosalie Corona 43 Bullying in Adolescence and Psychosocial Adjustment: the Buffering Effect of Parental Communication Maggie Ledwell 32 Parental Alcohol-Specific Rules and Alcohol Use From Early Adolescence to Young Adulthood Suzane Mares, Anna Lichtwarck-Aschoff, William Burk, Haske Van der Vorst, Rutger Engels 44 The Cybervictimization Scale: Reliability, Factors, and Relation to Outcomes for College Students Melissa Hord, Elizabeth Baroni, Patricia Dieter, Cynthia Erdley, Ethan Rothstein 33 The Influence of Family-, Peer-, and School-Level Social Norms and Gender on Youth Alcohol Use Jennifer Carrano, Rebekah Levine Coley, James Mahalik, Caitlin Lombadi 45 Dating Attractiveness in Mid-Adolescence: The Roles of Peer Status, Relational Aggression, and Gender Cassandra Cross, John Houser, Lara Mayeux 34 Influence of Best Friends’ and Dating Partners’ Ethnicity on the Developmental Trajectories of Delinquency Thao Le, Gary Stockdale 46 Friends Influence Schoolwork Engagement; Maternal Affection Moderates Negative Influence Donna Marion, Brett Laursen, Katariina Salmela-Aro, Noona Kiuru, Jari-Erik Nurmi 35 Variations in Physiological Reactivity to Console Vs. Active Video Game Play Mary Ballard, Glenna Read 88 47 She is so Nosy About my Boyfriend: Sources of Tension Between Introverted and Extraverted College Friends Kelly Gola 58 Trajectories of Adaptation in Adolescence: Perceived Competence Promotes Resilience Molly Adrian, Kristy Ludwig, Ann Vander Stoep, Elizabeth McCauley 48 Friends’ Deviant and Supportive Talk: Links with Adolescent Risk Behavior Esti Iturralde, Sandra Elmgren, Jennifer Wong, Gayla Margolin 59 Trajectories of Depressive Symptoms and Active Coping Across High School Predict Adaptive Functioning of African Americans Adults Daniel Choe, Marc Zimmerman 49 Early Adolescence Social Withdrawal as a Predictor of Late Adolescence Autonomy and Relatedness with Romantic Partners Elenda Hessel, Megan Schad, Joanna Chango, Ann Spilker, Caroline White, Joseph Allen 60 Childhood Externalizing Spectrum and Externalizing Disorders in Emerging Adulthood: Parental Warmth and Discipline as Protective and Moderating Factors Jeremy Luk, Kevin King, Katie Witkiewitz, Robert McMahon 50 Identifying Subtypes of Peer Status by Preference and Popularity Yvonne van den Berg, Antonius Cillessen 61 Mental Health as a Unique Risk Factor for Poor Academic Achievement: Results From a Study of Canadian Children Vasilinka Tsar, Cindy Do, Heather Brittain, Patricia McDougall, Tracy Vaillancourt 51 Peer Influence on Risky Behavior in Adolescents of a Low-Risk Population Zachary Shindorf 62 Dysfunctional Individuation and Adaptive Narcissism in Emerging Adulthood Paul Stey, Daniel Lapsley, Ashleigh Renteria, Mary McKeever 52 Children’s Management of PeerVictimization Scenarios: Links to Symptoms of Anxiety and Depression Laura Cuttini, Melanie Dirks, Miriam Kirmayer 63 Trajectories of Anxiety Symptoms Among Adolescents Exposured to the 2008 Wenchuan Earthquake in China Lan Zhang, Fang Fan, Fulei Geng 53 Prosocial Conduct in Early Adolescence: Is Kindness Contagious in Large Urban Middle Schools? Samantha Simmons, Jaana Juvonen 64 Developmental Trajectories of Internalizing Symptoms Among African American Youth on the Roles of Child Protective Services Hazel Prelow, Isaura Olivares 54 The Effects of Age on Attraction Among Late-Adolescents Aged 19-22 Years Tom Koziol, Jonathan Santo 65 Qualitative Action-Project Method: A New Method for Studying Adolescents and Their Close Relationships Leah Wilson, Amy Green, Sheila Marshall, Richard Young, Emily Polak, Krista Socholotiuk, Laura Klubben 55 Interpersonal Power Among Romantically Involved Latino Adolescents: Links with Overall Relationship Quality Annel Cordero, Renee Galliher 56 Perpetration of Physical and Psychological Aggression in Romantic Relationships of Adolescent Girls and Boys at High-risk for Aggression Nicole Catherine, Ingrid Obsuth, Marlene Moretti 66 Cultural Competence in Counseling Immigrant Youth: A Mixed Methods Study Lauren Rogers-Sirin 67 Susceptibility to Peer Influence as a Moderator of the Effectiveness of Group Therapy for Trauma Symptoms Joseph Tan, Joanna Herres, Stevie Grassetti, Roger Kobak 57 The Social Goals of Early Adolescents When Providing Support to their Bullied Best Friends Amy Kaye, Cynthia Erdley 89 68 Reactive and Proactive Aggression in Adolescent Males Paula Fite, Adrian Raine, Magda Stouthamer-Loeber, Rolf Loeber, Dustin Pardini 79 Identity Distress and its Effect on Career Development Garima Jhingon, Shengnan Li, Steven Berman 80 Does Class Matter? Examining the Centrality of Social Class Identity for Emerging Adults Virginia Thomas, Margarita Azmitia 69 Cool and Hot Executive Functioning in Provoked Physical Aggression Angele MacTavish, Karl Hennig 70 Crimes committed with or without peers: The roles of parental monitoring and peer delinquency for adjudicated youth Morgan Dynes, Sarah Domoff, Carolyn Tompsett 81 From the Conceptual to the Empirical: Identifying Racial Identity Profiles Steven Roberts, Enrique Neblett 82 Cohort Effect on the age of Coming Out for Bisexual Male Adolescents Mark McCormack, Adi Adams, Eric Anderson 71 Parental Psychological Control and Adolescent Adjustment: The Mediating Role of Anger Regulation Lixian Cui, Amanda Morris, Michael Criss, Benjamin Houltberg, Cara Bosler 83 Disclosing Too Much to Too Many? Chinese College Students’ Internet Privacy Settings Dong Liu, B. Brown 72 Temperament Variations in Young Adolescent’s Emotional and Regulatory Responses to Positive Events Chit Yuen Yi, Cara Palmer, Amy Gentzler 84 Parents of Adolescents’ Information and Communication Technology Use for Communication with Children Jessica Connell, Jennifer Doty, Jodi Dworkin, Susan Walker 73 Self-Worth Contingencies Among Adolescents and Emerging Adults: Linking Parental Rejection, Disordered Eating and Depression Rebecca Burwell, Laura Satkowski Saturday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am (Event 4-007) Paper Discussion Symposium East Ballroom Salon C Saturday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 74 Agentic and Communal Social Goals: Examining Narcissism, Empathy, and Perceptions of Self and Others in Late Adolescence Danielle Findley, Tiina Ojanen 4-007. A Really Boring Symposium: Cross-National Studies on the Correlates and Consequences of Adolescent Boredom 75 Developmental changes in adolescents’ conflict resolution in friendships: Moderation by adolescents’ personality types Rongqin Yu, Susan Branje, Loes Keijsers, Wim Meeus Chair: John E. Schulenberg Discussant: Ronald Dahl Course and Correlates of Subjective Boredom During Adolescence: The Big Picture Based on US National Data John Schulenberg, Meghan Martz, Julie Maslowsky, Megan Patrick, Jeremy Staff 76 The Association of Parenting Practices and Parental Socialization with the Development of Adolescent Prosocial Behavior David Estell, Mark Wilhelm, Neil Perdue, Ye Zhang 77 Peer Relationships, Bullying, and Peer Victimization Following Profound Early Deprivation Clio Pitula, Kathleen Thomas, Jennifer Wenner, Nicki Crick, Megan Gunnar (continued) 90 The Development of Leisure Boredom in Early Adolescence: Predictors and Associations with Problem Behaviors in a German Sample Michael Spaeth, Karina Weichold, Rainer Silbereisen Was Bob Seger right? Relation between Free Time Boredom and [Risky] Sex Among South African Youth Jacqueline Cox, Elizabeth Weybright, Linda Caldwell, Edward Smith, Tania Vergnani, Lisa Wegner (Event 4-012) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 13 Saturday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 4-012. Examining the Roles of Parents, Peers, and Schools in the Development of Affective and Cognitive Empathy Chair: Milena D. Batanova Discussant: Gustavo Carlo Developmental Links Between Adolescent Empathy and Relationships With Parents and Friends Jolien van der Graaff, Susan Branje, Minet de Wied, Skyler Hawk, Tom Frijns, Pol van Lier, Wim Meeus Predictors of Empathic Concern and Perspective Taking in Early Adolescence: Do Family and School Level Influences Vary by Gender? Milena Batanova, Alexandra Loukas, Jessica Cance Predicting Children’s Cognitive and Affective Empathy at Age 15 From Parental Support and Friendship Quality in Elementary School Deborah Laible, Gustavo Carlo, Tia Panfile, Mairin Augustine (Event 4-008) Roundtable East Meeting 1 Saturday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 4-008. Bridging the Research-Practice Divide: Best Practices for Using Research to Improve Mentoring Moderator: Nancy L. Deutsch Panelists: Edith Lawrence, Jessie Thomason, Gabriel Kuperminc, Luciano Berardi (Event 4-010) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 11 Saturday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 4-010. The Role of Gender and Partner Attitudes on Sexual Attitudes and Behaviors Chair: Sara A. Vasilenko Discussant: Emily Impett Partner Attitudes and Contraceptive Behavior in Adolescent Romantic Couples Derek Kreager, Sara Vasilenko, Eva Lefkowitz Actor/Partner Effects in Young Adult Romantic Couples’ Sexual Attitudes Elizabeth Morgan The role of gender in sexual behaviors, values and expectations among adolescents living in Mexico Graciela Espinosa-Hernandez, Jacquelyn Darazsdi, Julia Daugherty, Sara Vasilenko 91 (Event 4-013) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 14 Saturday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am (Event 4-015) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 17 Saturday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 4-013. Functional and Dysfunctional Individuation: International Perspectives 4-015. Adolescent self-harm across culture and context: Similarities and differences in risk and protection Chair: Daniel Lapsley Discussant: Kate C. McLean Dysfunctional Individuation in Early and Late Adolescence Daniel Lapsley, Paul Stey When the Separation-Individuation Process Goes Awry: Distinguishing Between Dysfunctional Dependence and Dysfunctional Independence Evie Kins, Wim Beyers, Bart Soenens Promotion of Autonomy or Promotion of Independence? Which Parenting Construct Better Predicts Psychosocial Functioning ? Alicia Facio, Santiago Resett Chair: Janis Whitlock Protective factors at work in self-injury cessation Graham Martin, Penelope Hasking Nonsuicidal Self-Injury Among Canadian Street-Involved Adolescents Aviva Laye-Gindhu, Elizabeth Saewyc Non-Suicidal Self-Harm Among Sexual Minority and Transgender Youth N. Eugene Walls (Event 4-016) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 18 Saturday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am (Event 4-014) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 15 Saturday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 4-016. Personality-targeted interventions: an innovative and effective approach to school-based prevention of substance use and mental health problems 4-014. Dynamic Social Network Analyses of Friendship and Adolescent Substance Use Chair: Patricia Conrod Discussant: Sherry H. Stewart The relationship between mental health and substance misuse prevention in an adolescent sample: a personality-targeted, teacher-delivered intervention model. Maeve O'Leary-Barrett, Patricia Conrod Identifying adolescents at risk for substance use and other comorbid problems with a brief self-report personality scale. Natalie Castellanos Ryan, Maeve O'LearyBarrett, Ann Mills Lassiter, Patricia Conrod, Laura Sully Secondary academic outcomes of a cluster randomised trial evaluating a selective, personality-targeted prevention programme for adolescent substance misuse. Patricia Conrod, Maeve O'Leary-Barrett, Sara Colalillo Chair: D. Wayne Osgood Discussant: Thomas J. Dishion Why Are Kids Who Drink Popular? Friendship Dynamics and the Emergence of Alcohol Use D. Wayne Osgood, Scott Gest, James Moody, Mark Feinberg, Daniel Ragan, Lacey Wallace The Importance of Cigarette Smoking: Selection and Deselection Among Adolescents in Smoking and Nonsmoking Friendship Groups Dawn DeLay, Brett Laursen, Noona Kiuru, Jari-Erik Nurmi, Katariina Salmela-Aro The Role of Alcohol Use in Choices of Same and Opposite Gender Friends Jacob Cheadle 92 (Event 4-017) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 19 Saturday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am (Event 4-019) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 3 Saturday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 4-017. Patterns of Aggression and Victimization Among Low Income, African American Youth: Results From Three Person-Centered Analyses 4-019. Moral Disengagement and Adolescent Antisocial Conduct: Good Kids Behaving Badly Chair: Amie Bettencourt Discussant: Amy Bellmore Latent Classes of Aggression and Victimization in Urban African American Preadolescents: Associations with PeerPerceived Characteristics Katherine Clemans, Nicholas Ialongo Examining the link between bullying profiles and perceptions of school climate: A latent class approach Asha Goldweber, Tracy Evian-Waasdorp, Catherine Bradshaw Patterns of peer victimization and aggression and predictors of their change during adolescence Amie Bettencourt, Weiwei Liu, Albert Farrell, Terri Sullivan Chair: Gianluca Gini Discussant: Gianluca Gini Moral Disengagement as the Link between the Influences of Empathy and Perspective Taking on Peer Conflict Kay Bussey, Catherine Quinn The Influence of Moral Disengagement on Social Bullying in Dyadic Very Best Friendships Sally Fitzpatrick, Kay Bussey The Relationship between Alcohol Harm, Delinquency, Moral Disengagement and Guilt Catherine Quinn, Kay Bussey (Event 4-020) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 7 Saturday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am (Event 4-018) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 2 Saturday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am 4-020. Parental Financial Assistance and the Transition to Adulthood: Who Is Getting What and What Are the Effects? 4-018. Using Theoretical Frameworks to Understand Achievement Motivation in African American Adolescents Chair: Monica Kirkpatrick Johnson Discussant: Ariel Kalil Familial Financial Assistance to Young Adults Patrick Wightman The implications of parental financial assistance in the transition to adulthood for well-being and parent-child relationships. Monica Kirkpatrick Johnson The Effects of Parental Support on the Transition to Adulthood Teresa Swartz, Ann Meier, Jeylan Mortimer, Heather McLaughlin, Rachelle Hill Chair: Dana Wood Discussant: Sandra Graham Examining Latent Profiles of African American Adolescents’ Causal Attributions Akilah Swinton, Beth Kurtz-Costes, Rachel Upton, Tanee Hudgens, Stephanie Rowley School Racial Composition, Academic Performance, and Adaptive Goal Patterns Among African American Sixth Grade Students Dana Wood, Erin Cue Academic Motivation among African American Youth: Exploring Expectancies and Values Kelly Minor 93 (Event 4-021) Invited Roundtable East Meeting 8 Saturday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am the study of contexts is particularly relevant for policies to support LGBTQ adolescents: policy efforts hinge on research that points to strategies for creating supportive environments for LGBTQ youth. How can this body of research be most relevant to public programs and policies? 4-021. Cultures and Contexts of LGBTQ Adolescents: Research Innovations and Policy Implications Moderator: Stephen T. Russell, Family and Consumer Sciences, University of Arizona; Director, Frances McClelland Institute for Children, Youth, and Families; SRA PresidentElect Panelists: Line Chamberland, Departement of Sexology, Université du Québec à Montréal S. Bryn Austin, Children’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, and Human Development and Health, Harvard School of Public Health Elizabeth Saewyc, Canadian Institutes for Health Resaerch/Public Health Agency of Canada, and School of Nursing, Division of Adolescent Medicine, University of British Columbia-Vancouver Biography. Stephen T. Russell is Distinguished Professor and Fitch Nesbitt Endowed Chair in Family and Consumer Sciences in the John & Doris Norton School of Family and Consumer Sciences at the University of Arizona, and Director of the Frances McClelland Institute for Children, Youth, and Families. Stephen conducts research on cultural influences on parent-adolescent relationships and the health and development of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) youth. He was co-editor of Asian American Parenting and Parent-Adolescent Relationships (with Lisa Crockett and Ruth Chao, Springer, 2010). His research on LGBTQ youth has been supported by a Wayne F. Placek Award from the American Psychological Foundation (2000), a William T. Grant Foundation Scholar Award (2001-2006), and a Distinguished Investigator Award from the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (2009-2011). He is currently collaborating on a prospective study of LGBTQ youth and the risk for suicide (with Arnold Grossman and Phil Rutter). He served on the board of the National Council on Family Relations and is an elected member of the International Academy of Sex Research. He is President-Elect of the Society for Research on Adolescence. He studied sociology at Wake Forest University (B.A.), the College of William and Mary (M.A.), and Duke University (Ph.D.). Abstract. Researchers have spent years documenting health and behavior risks among LGBTQ adolescents. Most of the existing scholarship has been conducted in and focused on adolescents the United States and other English-language cultures. More recently, scholars have turned to studies of culture and contexts for deeper understandings of risk - as well as resilience. This roundtable discussion will focus on innovations in research and areas for future scholarship in studies of LGBTQ adolescents. A group of scholars representing diverse fields (family studies / human development; sociology; sexology; public health / medicine; nursing) will discuss compelling questions for the coming decade. What areas of study offer the most promise for advancing understandings of LGBTQ adolescents? In what ways can scholarship from diverse cultures and contexts challenge thinking and advance knowledge about LGBTQ adolescents? Finally, 94 (Event 4-022) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 9 Saturday, 10:15 am - 11:45 am Maltreated Adolescents Transitioning to Young Adulthood Nicholas Bergeron 4-022. Developmental-Ecological Prevention with Middle School Students: Should We Focus on the Whole-School or Target High Risk Students? Chair: Pamela Orpinas Discussant: Hyman Hops Ecological Approach to Universal and Selective Violence Prevention in Sixth Grade: General Population Effects David Henry, Michael Schoeny The GREAT Schools and Families Study: Study Framework and Developmental Trends of Risk and Protective Factors Thomas Simon Effects of Universal and Selective Violence on High-Risk Socially-Influential Students: Ecological Implications and Mediating Processes Michael Schoeny, Patrick Tolan (Event 4-023) Poster Session 10 Exhibit Hall B Saturday, 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm Longitudinal Reliability of Self-Reported Age at Menarche in Adolescent Girls: Variability Across Time and Method Lorah Dorn, Lisa Sontag-Padilla, Stephanie Pabst, Abbigail Tissot, Elizabeth Susman 2 Optimizing Judgments and Understanding of Ratios: The Development of Dual Process Regulation Eric Amsel, Amy Blunck 3 Adolescents’ Perceived Maturity with Parents and Peers Jovita Vytasek, Sheila Marshall 4 Immigrant Context: A Source of both Cohesion and Division in the Relationship between Adolescents and Parents Kirtana Tanaku, Ayfer Dost Gözkan, Lene Arnett Jensen 7 Navigating the Transition to High School: Dialectical Tensions in Parent-Adolescent Conversations Agnieszka Wozniak, Susan Lollis, Sheila Marshall 8 Risky Behaviors, Family Involvement, and Health: A Longitudinal Study of Middle and High School Students Susan Chuang, Miles McNall, Miles Bies, Diana Truong, Alexa Hueniken 9 Familism, Family Ethnic Socialization, and Mexican-Origin Adolescent Mothers’ Psychosocial Adjustment Diamond Bravo, Adriana Umaña-Taylor, Amy Guimond, Kimberly Updegraff, Laudan Jahromi 10 African American Single Mother Families: The Role of Coparent Identity and MotherCoparent Relationship in Youth Adjustment Justin Parent, Deborah Jones, Rex Forehand, Jessica Cuellar, Michelle Gonzalez, Nada Mussad Saturday, 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm 1 6 11 Daddy Issues: African and Caribbean American Father-Daughter Relationship Quality and Physical and Mental Health Outcomes Latasha Robinson, Sean Joe 12 Mother-child communication quality in high-risk families: Links to relationship quality and prosocial skills in preadolescence Lindsey Barrieau, Leah Enns, Dale Stack, Joleen Coirazza, Lisa Serbin, Jane Ledingham, Alex Schwartzman 13 Self-Reported Barriers to Sexuality Communication between Latina Mothers and Adolescent Daughters Magali Bravo Social Support, Cognitive Ability, and Educational and Employment Resilience in 95 16 The Effects of Out-of-School Time Use on Changes in Youth BMI Across the Adolescent Years Nicole Zarrett, Carl Sorensen, Stephen Peck 28 Three Layers of Familism and Individualism During Emerging Adulthood: Values, Decisions, and Emotional Conflicts Heejung Park, Adriana Manago, Patricia Greenfield 17 The Quality of Students’ After-School Experiences and its Relation to Adolescent Functioning Sabrina Kataoka, Deborah Vandell 29 The Influence of Racial Socialization Messages on Peer and Educational Discrimination Distress in African American Adolescents Elizabeth Adams, Tanee Hudgens, Beth Kurtz-Costes, Stephanie Rowley 18 Academic Performance and Internalizing and Externalizing Behaviors among Chinese, Korean, and Filipino American Adolescents Julienne Palbusa 30 Using Western Models of Autonomy with Eastern Youth Chien-Ti Lee, Troy Beckert, Sarah Tulane 19 Parents' Educational Beliefs and MexicanAmerican Adolescents' Academic Performance Michelle Harris, Kali Trzesniewski, Richard Robins 31 Identifying Pregnancy and Contraceptive Use Attitudes and Maternal Communication Factors that Protect Latina Adolescents in Alternative High Schools from an Early Pregnancy Maria Elena Cruz, Laura Romo 21 Educational Success and Mental Health Vary Across Student Engagement Profiles in School Ming-Te Wang 32 Alcohol-Specific Parenting and Adolescent Alcohol Use Mediated by Self-Efficacy and Alcohol Expectations Suzanne Mares, Haske Van der Vorst, Anna Lichtwarck-Aschoff, Rutger Engels 22 Family Connectedness and Stress during the Transition to College Susan Sy, Allyson Furry 33 Parental Practices and Body Image Dissatisfaction Among Early Adolescents Natalie Goodwin, Stephanie Cardwell, Sylvie Mrug, Michael Windle 23 Beliefs about Adolescents and Teacher Efficacy Among Prospective Teachers Alison Ludden 24 Clusters of Civic Attitudes among Young People in Three Scandinavian Countries: Analysis of Data from ICCS 2009 Carolyn Barber, Judith Torney-Purta 34 The Relation of Adolescent Rebellion to Academic Success and Satisfaction in Young Adulthood Phillip Small, Malcolm Watson, Ellen Wright 25 Correlates of Subtle Sexism among Adolescent Girls and Boys Campbell Leaper, Rachael Robnett 35 Dietary Behaviors, Physical Activity, Weight and Weight Control among Sexual Minority and Heterosexual Adolescents Carol Goodenow 26 Influences of Employment Status and Social Support on Depression in Postsecondary Students Rubab Arim, Jose Domene 36 Person, Peers and Place: A Multilevel Analysis of Pregnancy Attitudes and Contraceptive Use Felisa Gonzales, Amita Vyas, Maria Trent, Jacky Jennings, Jonathan Ellen 27 Contextual variations in the structure of the self: Differences in the associations between perceived competence and general self-worth of early adolescents Jonathan Santo, William Bukowski, LuzStella Lopez, Gina Carmago, Shari Mayman, Ryan Adams 37 Risk and Resilience among Male Adolescents and Emerging Adults Who Have Sex with Men Noelle Leonard, Sonali Rajan, Temi Aregbesola, Marya Gwadz, Marion Riedel 96 38 Protecting against Youth Smoking and Drinking Initiation: The Roles of School Engagement, Peer Relations, and Family Connection Yibing Li, Michelle Boyd, Jianjun Liu, Richard Lerner 50 The Association Between Adolescent Status, Behavior in the Peer Group, and Future Vocational Interests Upon Labor Market Entry Britta Ruschoff, Jan Dijkstra, Rene Veenstra, Siegwart Lindenberg 39 Joint Trajectories of Violent Victimization and Marijuana Use and Their Health Consequences Among Urban African American and Puerto Rican Young Men Kerstin Pahl, Judith Brook, Jung Yeon Lee 51 Social and Generalized Anxiety and Adolescent Substance Use: The Moderating Role of Perceived Peer Norms Jennifer Zehe, Craig Colder, Jennifer Read, William Wieczorek, Liliana Lengua, Larry Hawk 41 Bidirectional Associations Between Early Adolescents’ Adjustment Problems and Peer Victimization Alexandra Loukas, Ken Ripperger-Suhler, Milena Batanova 52 Relational Aggression: How Does Measurement Affect Associations With Adjustment? Sarah Helms, Stephanie Brennan, Mitchell Prinstein 42 The Psychological Influence of Peer Victimization and Bullying on Turkish Adolescents Hilal Sen, Aysun Dogan, Senay Cebioglu 53 Influence of a Caring Classroom Context on Young Adolescents’ Social and Academic Goal Pursuit Anat Zaidman-Zait, Kimberly SchonertReichl 44 Individual and School-Related Protective Factors of Peer Aggression in Middle-School Jessica Schnoll, Jennifer Connolly, Wendy Josephson 54 Adolescent Peer and Romantic Relations: An investigation into Childhood Foundations Diane Wille 45 Attitudinal and Experiential Factors Related to Interethnic Romantic Relationships among Native American Late Adolescents and Young Adults Merrill Jones, Renee Galliher 55 “Can We Talk About My Boyfriend?” Negative Romantic Partner Interactions as a Mediator Between Co-Rumination and Depression Ethan Rothstein, Jennifer Sauve, Hannah Ford, Jessica Fales, Janine Slavec, Doug Nangle 46 Autonomy and Friendship Quality as Exacerbating Factors of Internalizing Symptoms Amanda LeTard, Julie Aikins 56 Adolescent Romantic Relationship Longevity Predictors: A Focus on Parental Marital Status Samantha Gray, Katherine Kivisto, Rachel Holmes, Deborah Welsh 47 Problem-focused Talk with Friends: How Co-ruminating Face-to-Face and Online Relates to Adjustment During the College Transition John Ranney, Wendy Troop-Gordon 57 Do High Quality Friendships Moderate the Link Between the Pain Experience and Internalizing Problems in Youth With Chronic Pain? Jessica Fales, Anna Wilson 48 Will You Be My Friend? Peer Victimization and Social Status Mobility in Early Adolescence Leslie Echols, Sandra Graham 49 Affective dynamics during parentadolescent interactions: Maternal depression, dyadic physiology, and observed negativity and repair Arin Connell, Abigail Hughes-Scalise, Susan Klostermann, Emily Patton 97 58 Adolescent Affective Reactivity Predicts Cognitive Reactivity to Induced Stress Sarah Crystal, Kara Pegram, Amy Mezulis Hillary Klinzing, Jonathan Santo, Felicia Meyer, William Bukowski 69 Forms of Aggression and Psychopathology: The Role of Friendship Conflict Kimberly Kamper, Jamie Ostrov 59 The Implications of Adult Identity for Mental Health in Young Adulthood Janel Benson, Hyung Chol (Brandon) Yoo 70 An examination of longitudinal delinquent trajectories: Gender differences in young adult outcomes Arielle Deutsch, Kristin Moilanen 61 Insecure attachment, negative emotionality, and the development of borderline traits in a sample of high-risk adolescent girls Rachael Lax, Mandi Burnette 71 Emotion Regulation Profiles in Adolescence Jessica Lougheed, Tom Hollenstein 62 Exploring the Relationship between Trauma Exposure and Posttraumatic Growth in Adolescents Alexandra Sims, Jillandra Rovaris, Stacy Overstreet, Sydney Smith 72 Predicting Adolescents Empathy and Forgiveness Tia Panfile, Deborah Laible, Mairin Augustine 73 Interactive Contribution of Biased Information-Processing and Maternal Depression to Youth Internalizing Psychopathology Megan Flynn, Karen Rudolph 63 Sleeping quality and its influence factors among the adolescents of rural urbanization in the semi-urbanization areas of China Lu Zhang, Fang Fan, Qing Zhu, Fulei Geng, Lan Zhang, Shixiu Sun, Yanyun Qin, Shan Cheng 74 The Relationship Between Parent Involvement and Vocational School Students’ Academic Engagement: The Moderation Effect of Autonomy Supportive/Controlling Parenting Style Wu Nini, Yao Meilin 64 Using Experience Sampling Methods to Understand Disadvantaged Urban Youths' Activities, Supports, and Motivations Jennifer Prescott, Jonathan Zaff, Elizabeth Jones 75 The Stability of Psychopathic Traits Over 6months: Are There Significant Fluctuations During Adolescence? Richelle Isaak, Jennifer Beneteau, Etta Brodersen, Jodi Viljoen, Zina Lee, Kevin Douglas 65 Binge Drinking Trajectories From Adolescence to Young Adulthood: the Effects of Peer Social Network Hyeouk Hahm, Eric Kolaczyk, Jisun Jang, Asma Bhindarwala, Theodora Swenson 76 Religious Behavior and Beliefs as Predictors for Prosocial Behavior among Adolescents Nicholas Shaman, Carly Dierkhising 66 Feasibility of Adapting and Implementing Prevention Focused Evidence-Based Programs in Child Welfare Settings Heather Storer, Susan Barkan, Kevin Haggerty, Emma Sherman 77 Further Development of a Multiple-Choice Measure of Youth Responses to Peer Provocation: Test-Retest Reliability and Links to Peer Victimization Melanie Dirks, Laura Cuttini, Miriam Kirmayer 67 Evaluation of the Skills for Preventing Injury in Youth Program: Impact on Health Risk Behaviors, Injury and School Connectedness Rebekah Chapman, Lisa Buckley, Mary Sheehan 78 Constellations of Ethnic Identity and Gender Identity Among Late Adolescents of Color Mary Joyce Juan, Moin Syed 68 The Influence of Parental Feeling Validation on Young Adolescents’ Use of Relational Aggression and the Moderating Role of Gender 98 79 Self-Discontinuity Moderates the Association between Peer Victimization and Depressed Affect: A five-month examination of early adolescents Lina Maria Saldarriaga Mesa, Jonathan Santo, Holly Recchia, Alexa Martin-Storey, William Bukowski 80 Academic Identity Development Among African-American Female First-Generation College Students: A Longitudinal, Qualitative Study Gina Arnone, Laura Murray, Mike Nakkula Positive Adolescent Health: What Matters Over Time? Margaret Kern, Lizbeth Benson Advances in Measuring Positive Adolescent Health: The Pediatric Patient Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS)® Katherine Bevans, Christopher Forrest (Event 4-025) Paper Discussion Symposium East Ballroom Salon C Saturday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 81 Trajectories of Ethnic Identity Exploration and Affirmation and Belonging and WellBeing in Urban African American and Puerto Rican Young Adults Kerstin Pahl, Judith Brook, Jung Yeon Lee, Ashley Rainford 4-025. Positive Youth Development in Action: Developmental Strengths, Resiliency, and Thriving in Diverse Populations 82 The Relation between Peer Victimization and Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Identity Hoa Lam, Hallie Bregman, Matthew Page, Neena Malik, Kristin Lindahl Chair: Kelly D. Schwartz Discussant: William Damon Where the Streets Have a Name: Developmental Assets and Urban Youth Kelly Schwartz, Pamela King The Holistic Student Assessment Tool: Assessing Adolescent’s Resiliencies Gil Noam, Tina Malti, Martin Guhn Using Population-Level Data to Understand Assets and Thriving of Early Adolescents in Context Kimberly Schonert-Reichl, Martin Guhn, Clyde Hertzman, Shelley Hymel, Lina Sweiss, Eva Oberle 83 Gender Nonconformity, Psychological WellBeing and Stigmatization: How Are These Concepts Related Among Same Sex Attracted Youths? Laura Baams, Titia Beek, Helene Hille, Felice Zevenbergen, Henny Bos 84 The Short-Term Effects of Viewing Relationally Aggressive Media on Hostile Cognitions in Emerging Adult Women Jennifer Linder, Emily Anderson, Sarah Coyne (Event 4-026) Roundtable East Meeting 1 Saturday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm Saturday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm (Event 4-024) Paper Discussion Symposium East Ballroom Salon A Saturday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 4-026. Beyond the Ivory Tower: Considering the Public Relevance of Research on Adolescence 4-024. Positive Adolescent Health Moderators: Stephen T. Russell, Kristen Harrison Panelists: Brian Wilcox, Brian Mustanski, Nicole Yohalem Chair: Margaret L. Kern Toward a Positive Psychology of Adolescence Laurence Steinberg Positive Psychological Well-Being as a Predictor of Adolescents’ Physical Health Elizabeth Steinberg, Margaret Kern, Laurence Steinberg 99 (Event 4-027) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 10 Saturday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 4-027. Parents Just Don’t Understand? Examining Parents’ Insight into Adolescents’ Social Experiences Chair: Jeffrey G. Parker Parents Know Best: Differential Prediction of Aggression via Unique Perceptions of Preadolescent Intent Attributions and Emotional Distress David Nelson, Christine Cramer, Sarah Coyne Social Discomfort in Preadolescence: Predictors of Discrepancies Between Preadolescents and their Parents and Teachers Kelly Tu, Stephen Erath Antecedents and Consequences of Maternal Sensitivity to Their Adolescent’s Vulnerability to Jealousy over Friends Blake Nielsen, Jeffrey Parker, Kristina McDonald Impact of Perceived Support from Parents and Peers on African-American Adolescents’ Sense of Self-worth Cassandra Coddington, Michael Robinson, Cecil Robinson, Derrick Bryan, Crystal Holder Gender and Early Exposure to Violence as Determinants of Street Code Trajectories Among Adolescents Living in Impoverished Neighborhoods John Bolland, Cassandra Coddington, Holli Drummond, Shannon Hitchcock, Nicole du Maine Development of Self-Worth Among High Poverty, African-American Adolescents Cecil Robinson, Cassandra Coddington, Sara Tomek, John Bolland (Event 4-029) Emerging Scholar Roundtable East Meeting 12 Saturday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 4-029. Emerging Scholars' Event - The Ins and Outs of Publishing: A Conversation With the Editors Moderator: Carolyn Spellings, Ryan Landoll Panelists: Jeffrey Arnett, Editor, Journal of Adolescent Research Nancy Guerra, Editor, Journal of Research on Adolescence Charles Irwin Jr., Editor, Journal of Adolescent Health Brett Laursen, Editor, Method and Measures Section, International Journal of Behavioral Development (Event 4-028) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 11 Saturday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 4-028. Social and Contextual Factors Influencing the Development and Behavior of Underclass AfricanAmerican Adolescents Chair: Cassandra S. Coddington Sense of Community as a Protective Factor in the Development of Traumatic Stress for Underclass African-American Adolescents Brittany Sansbury, Marcia Perritt, John Bolland, Cassandra Coddington 100 (Event 4-030) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 13 Saturday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm Katherine Ehrlich, Jude Cassidy, Stacey Daughters, Carl Lejeuz (Event 4-032) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 15 Saturday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 4-030. Flexibility in parent-adolescent interactions: Associations with emotion regulation, adjustment, and relationship quality 4-032. Family Context and Early Adolescents' Educational Experiences and Achievement among Newcomer Immigrant Families Chair: Susan Branje Heterogeneity of Developmental Trajectories of Flexibility in Parent-Adolescent Interactions Daniëlle Van der Giessen, Susan Branje, Wim Meeus, Tom Frijns, Pol van Lier Comparisons of Affective Flexibility in Parent-child Interactions among Healthy, Depressed, and Externalizing Adolescents Tom Hollenstein, Isabella Granic, Jennifer Silk Flexibility and Attractors in Context: Patterns of Family Emotion Socialization and Preadolescent Emotion Regulation Erika Lunkenheimer, Tom Hollenstein, Jun Wang, Ann Shields Chairs: Rashmita S. Mistry, Connie Tan Mexican Immigrant Parents’ Attitudes about School Involvement Christia Brown Parent-Child Acculturation Profiles as Predictors of Chinese American Adolescents’ Academic Trajectories Yijie Wang, Su Yeong Kim How Much Do Parents Matter? Reciprocal Associations between Parental Involvement and Immigrant Children’s Educational Trajectories Connie Tan, Rashmita Mistry (Event 4-031) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 14 Saturday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm (Event 4-033) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 17 Saturday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 4-031. Individual Differences and Contextual Effects: Psychosocial Outcomes in Adolescence and Young Adulthood 4-033. Precursors of Civic Engagement: International Perspectives Chair: Kathryn A. Degnan Discussant: Nathan Fox Childhood Behavioral Inhibition, Adolescent Friendship Quality, and Risk-Taking in Young Adulthood Kathryn Degnan, Alisa Almas, Laura MacPherson, Carl Lejeuz, Heather Henderson, Daniel Pine, Nathan Fox Links Between Trajectories of Shyness and Individual, Parenting, and Peer Factors from Early Childhood to Early Adolescence: A Longitudinal Study in Chinese Children Wonjung Oh, Xinyin Chen, Li Wang Individual and Contextual Predictors of RiskTaking: The Roles of Adolescent Distress Intolerance, Families, and Friendships Chair: Oksana Malanchuk Discussant: Dan Hart The Role of School and Work Engagement to Civic Engagement Kateriina Salmela-Aro, Katja Upadhyaya Racial/Ethnic Identity Formation and Civic Participation: A Longitudinal Appraisal Oksana Malanchuk, Celina Chatman-Nelson Civic Attitudes in Chilean Youth: Configurations by Gender, Socioeconomic Status, and Social Participation M. Loreto Martinez, Patricio Cumsille 101 (Event 4-034) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 18 Saturday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm (Event 4-036) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 2 Saturday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 4-034. Capturing the Complexity of Friendship and Physical Health: Insights on Obesity through Longitudinal Social Network Analysis 4-036. The Context of Identity and Story: New Directions in Narrative Psychology Chair: Carlene Wilson Discussant: Rutger C. Engels Adolescent Friendships, Weight, and Activity: Untangling Selection and Influence with Longitudinal Social Network Analysis David Schaefer, Sandi Simpkins, Chara Price, Andrea Vest Social Influence Mechanisms for Diet and Activity Among Middle-School-Age Youth John Light, Julie Rusby, Kimberly Nies, Deb Johnson-Shelton, Tom Snijders Junk Food Intake in Adolescents: Processes and Mechanisms Driving Consumption Similarities among Friends Kayla de la Haye, Garry Robins, Phil Mohr, Carlene Wilson Chair: Moin Syed How Goals and Modes of Narration Influence Identity and Well-being in Emergent Adulthood Cade Mansfield, Monisha Pasupathi Teens Telling Tales: How Maternal and Peer Audiences Support Narrative Identity Development Kate McLean, Lauren Jennings Narrative, Context, Coolness, and the Pursuit of Happiness Michael Bamberg Where's the Meaning? Context and MeaningMaking in Ethnicity-Related Stories Moin Syed, Mary Joyce Juan (Event 4-035) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 19 Saturday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm (Event 4-037) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 3 Saturday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 4-035. Uncovering Mechanisms that Increase Vulnerability to Depression: The Interplay of Temperament, Emotional Regulation and Coping 4-037. Moral Identity in Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood: Conceptualization, Measurement, and Validation Chair: Elizabeth McCauley Discussant: Janet S. Hyde Temperament, Rumination, and Depression Trajectories in Adolescence Amy Mezulis, Janet Hyde, Heather Priess, Jordan Simonson Mechanisms of Diathesis-Stress: The Role of Coping in Trajectories of Depression Cara Kiff, Liliana Lengua, Maureen Zalewski, Lyndsey Moran Affective Dysregulation Mediates the Association Between Temperament and Depressive Symptoms Molly Adrian, Elizabeth McCauley, Ann Vander Stoep, Gretchen Gudmundsen, Karen Pang Chair: Sam Hardy A Possible Selves Approach to Adolescent Moral Identity Sam Hardy, Lawrence Walker, Alexander Gray, Joshua Ruchty, Joseph Olsen Measuring Moral Identity: Early Experience, Prosocial Personality, and Moral Outcomes Darcia Narvaez, Jeff Brooks A Tale of Two Schemes: Hierarchical Integration of Agency and Communion among Young Moral Exemplars William Dunlop, Lawrence Walker, Jeremy Frimer, Thomas Weins, Kyle Matsuba 102 (Event 4-038) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 7 Saturday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm (Event 4-040) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 9 Saturday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 4-038. Relationships across the Life Course: Findings from the Iowa Family Transition Panel 4-040. P Is for Period: Formal and Informal Avenues of Education about Menstruation Chair: Frederick O. Lorenz Discussant: Rand D. Conger Romantic Relationships in Early Adulthood: Influences of Family, Personality, and Relationship Cognitions from Adolescence April Masarik, Rand Conger, Monica Martin, M. Donnellan, Katherine Masyn, Frederick Lorenz The Effects of Economic Hardship on Parenting and Child Outcomes Tricia Neppl, Rand Conger Interspousal Ambivalence and Interactions in the Early Years of Marriage Florensia Surjadi, Frederick Lorenz, Rand Conger Chair: Kathryn Frazier Preparation for menarche, menarcheal experience and attitudes toward menstruation in Mexican adolescents Ma. Luisa Marvan “I Learned Everything from My ‘Bad Friend’”: Informal Menstrual Education among Girls and Their Peers Theresa Jackson, Kathryn Frazier Periods and Postfeminism: You. Buy. Kotex Elizabeth Kissling Saturday, 1:45 pm - 3:15 pm (Event 4-041) Poster Session 11 Exhibit Hall B Saturday, 1:45 pm - 3:15 pm (Event 4-039) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 8 Saturday, 12:15 pm - 1:45 pm 4-039. The Role of Friendship in Fostering or Preventing Adolescent Internalizing Problems: New Insights into Mediators and Moderators Chair: Mara Brendgen The Power of Friendships: Can they Protect Genetically Vulnerable Youth From Depression? Mara Brendgen, Frank Vitaro, William Bukowski, Michel Boivin Interpersonal Interactions in Adolescents’ Friendships and Internalizing Symptoms Amanda Rose, Rebecca Schwartz-Mette Examining Stress-Reactive HPA-Axis Response as a Mediator of Longitudinal Associations Among Negative Peer Experiences and Depressive Symptom Volatility Mitchell Prinstein, Casey Calhoun, Joseph Franklin, Paul Hastings 103 1 Sexual Abuse and Age at Menarche: The Effect of Abuse Onset Sonya Negriff, Penelope Trickett 2 A Multi-Variate Approach to Adolescent Risk-Taking: The Role of Risk Perception, Risk Self Schema and Risk Tolerance Shelly Sadek, Catherine Chou 3 The influence of social context on trust behaviour during adolescence Nikki Lee, Jelle Jolles, Lydia Krabbendam 4 Parent maltreatment experience and child maladjustment: The mediating role of socio-demographic factors Diana Riser, Jungmeen Kim-Spoon 5 Observed Parent-Adolescent Behaviors During Triadic Family Discussion: The Role of Cumulative Family Violence Exposure Michelle Ramos, Aubrey Rodriguez, Chelsea Massoud, Gayla Margolin 6 Impact of an Intervention on Conflict, Parental Bonds, and Sexual Risk Behaviors Among the Adolescents of HIV-positive Mothers Judith Stein, Eric Rice, Mary Jane Rotheram-Borus 7 Longitudinal Connections among Parenting, Adolescent Self-Disclosure, Maternal Knowledge, and Adolescent Depressive Symptoms Dawn Gondoli, Elizabeth Blodgett Salafia, Rebecca Morrissey, Christine Steeger 9 16 Organized Activity Involvement and Problem Behavior Among Rural Youth: The Importance of Activity Type and Context Kaitlyn Ferris, Benjamin Oosterhoff, Aaron Metzger 17 Patterns of Participation in Structured and Unstructured Activities among Rural Youth Across Time: A Latent Trajectory Analysis Erin Sharp, Corinna Tucker, Megan Baril, Karen VanGundy, Cesar Rebellon 18 The Effects of Parent Involvement in School and Quality Time at Home on Latino Adolescents’ Academic Aspirations and Achievement Motivation Aida Mahmud, Jourdan Munster, Gabriela Chavira, Bryan Montana Conflict Resolution Strategies in ParentAdolescent Disagreements Jessica Solis, Andrea Hussong 10 The Impacts of Father Absence and Neighborhood Reproductive Context on Adolescent Sexual Behavior Erin Kennedy, Rebecca Ryan 19 Does Failing the California High School Exit Exam Undermine Future Orientation Toward College? Aletha Harven, Dana Wood 11 HIV Outreach for At-Risk Homeless Youth: A Meta-Analysis of Program Effectiveness Lauren Joly, Jennifer Connolly 20 Mathematics Class Tracking in the Context of the Québec High School Reform: Personal, Organisational and Social Determinants Valerie Lessard, Simon Larose, Bei Feng 12 Mexican Immigrant Mothers’ and Daughters’ Expectations for Adolescent Autonomy in Midadolescence Gisselle Lopez-Tello, Rebeca Mireles-Rios, Laura Romo 21 Why is the Decline in American Children's Engagement during Early Adolescence not Evident among Chinese? Yang Qu, Eva Pomerantz 13 Associations of Relationship Quality and Self-disclosure to Friends and Siblings in Early Adolescence Brynheld Martinez, Nina Howe 22 “Before, I didn’t care so much...now I want to learn”: Academic Identity Development Among Students From Two Early College High Schools Laura Murray, Gina Arnone, Mike Nakkula 14 “Vecindario”: Latino parents’ and adolescents’ perceptions of neighborhood boundaries and factors determining neighborhood quality Maria Rosario de Guzman, Rodrigo Cantarero, Jill Brown, Gustavo Carlo, Sandra Plata-Potter, Maureen Todd, Blanca Ramirez-Salazar, Daniela Proano, Alexandra Davis, Yan Xia 23 The PaSS Study: Bias in teachers’ expectations of high school graduation among White, Black, and Hispanic middle school students Michael Merten, Ronald Cox, Karina Shreffler, Kami Schwerdtfeger, Amanda Williams 15 “It’s a pretty place. It’s just hard to make a living”: How rural youth talk about their futures. Devora Shamah 104 24 Internal and External Motivation to Respond Without Prejudice in Adolescence Katharina Eckstein, Peter Noack, Thomas Martin, Burkhard Gniewosz Dana Tiggelman, Monique van de Ven, Onno C. P. van Schayck, Rutger Engels 36 The Meaning of Forceful Submission Fantasy in Late Adolescence (or, Why It’s O.K. To Dig Vampires) Patricia Hawley, Justin Lynn 25 The Problem with Princesses: Long-term Correlates of Disney Princess Movies and Princess Identities Miranda Davis, Andrew Smiler 37 Internalizing and Externalizing Behaviors as Predictors of Sexual Onset in Early Adolescence Frederic Dussault, Marie-Aude Boislard, Mara Brendgen, Frank Vitaro 26 Are School-Related Jobs Better? Stephen Hamilton, Rachel Sumner 27 For whom does extended intergroup contact affect intergroup attitudes? Anke Munniksma, Maykel Verkuyten, Andreas Flache, Tobias Stark, Rene Veenstra 38 Socio-Cultural Influences on Adolescent Smoking Behaviors in Mainland China: the Mediating Role of Smoking-Related Cognitions Yan Wang, Ambika Krishnakumar 28 Expected and Feared Possible Selves among Late Adolescents in Turkey and the United States Basak Sahin, Carolyn Mebert 39 Problem Video Game Play and Substance Use Problems among Emerging Adult Video Gamers: Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Findings Geoffrey Ream, Luther Elliott, Eloise Dunlap 30 Out-group and In-group Ethnicity-related Stressors' Association with Six Dimensions of Self-esteem for Ethnic Minority Students Lauren Smith, Sabine French 40 Parental Attitudes Regarding Marijuana Consumption and Adolescent’s Perceptions and use of Marijuana Aaron Deutsch, Adam Winsler 31 Maternal Depressive Symptoms as a Predictor of Alcohol Use Onset in Youth Dorian Lamis, Patrick Malone, John Lochman 41 Hurting Interpersonal Relationships via Different Means: Clusters of Relationally Aggressive Adolescents Ching-Ling Cheng, Hsiao-Wen Liao 32 Parental Monitoring and Supervision in High School Reduces Risk for Alcohol Use Disorder in College: Interactions with Gender and Impulsivity Övgü Kaynak, Kathleen Meyers, Kimberly Caldeira, Ken Winters, Amelia Arria 42 The Moderation Effects of Social Anxiety on the Associations between Relational Victimization and Academic Engagement Maria Perez, Beth Kotchick, Alison Papadakis, Rachel Grover 33 Change in Percent Body Fat over the First 2½ Years of College and What Predicts that Change Ali Zaremba-Morgan, Margaret Keiley, Aubrey Ryan, Juliana Groves 43 Non-Suicidal Self-Injury in Response to Relational Aggression: An Exploration of the Role of Coping Christina Morley, Alison Papadakis, Beth Kotchick, Rachel Grover 34 The Relationship Between Adolescent Antisocial Behaviour and Peer Deviance: The Role of Perceptual Bias Tom McAdams, Richard Rowe, Mark Blades 44 The Roles of Self Esteem, Anger and Social Cognition in Predicting Adolescent Aggression Allison Metz, Julia Graber 35 Mediation of Self-efficacy in the Relation Between Parental Factors and Physical Activity of Early Adolescents with Asthma 105 45 He hit, she hit: Examining romantic couple members’ reports of physical and psychological aggression Nicholas Bishop, Hope Brasfield, Deborah Welsh, Samantha Gray, Christi Culpepper, Rachel Holmes 56 A Mixed Method Study Exploring the Role of Natural Mentors Among Homeless Youth Michelle Dang, Katherine Conger, Joshua Breslau, Elizabeth Miller 57 Predictors of Latino Adolescents’ Feelings About Language Brokering Claudia Castañeda, Maria Jimenez, Ravreet Cheema, Nathaly Pacheco-Santivanez, Janet Oh 46 Correlates of Adolescent Disclosure to Parents about Peers: The Meditational Role of “Right-to-Know” Attitudes Hsun-yu Chan, B. Brown 58 The Longitudinal Associations of Addictive and Problematic Internet Behavior with Depressive Symptoms Vickie Bhatia, Joanne Davila 47 The Gendered Nature of Friendship Selection in Early Adolescence: Exploring Differences within Gender Specific Contexts Christian Berger, Jan Kornelis Dijkstra 59 Race as a Moderator of the Association Between Maternal and Child Depression Karen Pang, Sarah Charlesworth-Attie, Ann Vander Stoep, Elizabeth McCauley 48 Cross-ethnic Friendships and Inter-group Attitudes in Middle School Sandra Graham, Leslie Echols 49 Moderating Differences in Multicultural Efficacy Between White and Non-White Emerging Adult Pre-service Teachers Amir Francois, Joanna Lee Williams 60 Academic Performance and Perceived Racism as Social Determinants of Suicidal Behaviors Among High School Adolescents Brandon Respress, Shelley Francis, Sean Joe 50 Adolescent Susceptibility to Differing Types of Peer Influence on Alcohol and Marijuana Use Jamie Posthuma, Sharon Foster 61 Relationship Between Gratitude and PTSD: the Mediation of Social Support and Resilience Yuhong Zheng, Fang Fan, Tingchen Luo, Weifan Luo 51 Parental Involvement Moderates Peer Group Influences on School Motivation Justin Vollet, Thomas Kindermann 62 Traumatic Life Events, Mental Health and Resilience Among First Nation and Caucasian Adolescents Jacinthe Dion, Jennifer Hains 52 Early Adolescents’ friendship Networks: Network Properties and Developmental Features Huiyoung Shin, Allison Ryan 63 Performing Well, Feeling Bad: A Qualitative Examination of High-Performing Adolescent Girls’ Experiences of Stress and Coping J. Sophia Nam, Gopi Dhokai, Renee Spencer, Belle Liang, Elysha Greenberg 53 Children’s Positive Inter-Ethnic Attitudes: How Group Context and Salience of Groupmembership Shape Evaluations About Helping Jellie Sierksma, Maykel Verkuyten, Jochem Thijs 64 Voice Movement Therapy for Non Suicidal Self-Injury in late adolescents Graham Martin, Sophie Martin, Belinda Lequertier, Sarah Swannell 54 Do Romantic Relationships Compromise Students’ Adjustment to College? Chia-chen Yang, B. Brown 65 Utilizing Facebook Ads as a recruitment strategy for hard to find populations Nicholas Bishop, Hope Brasfield, Deborah Welsh, Susan Kashubeck-West 55 Relationship Dynamics, Fear of Suggesting Condom Use, and Condom Behaviors Among Latino Youth Jeanne Tschann, Elena Flores, Cynthia de Groat 106 66 Adolescent Dating Aggression: Relationship Education Makes a Difference Jennifer Kerpelman, Joe Pittman, Marinda Harrell-Levy, Francesca Adler-Baeder, Hans Cadely, Yanling Ma, Felicia Tuggle, Alyssa McElwain 76 The Entrepreneurship Intentional Self Regulation Questionnaire: Validation of a New Measure of Youth Entrepreneurship Michelle Weiner, G. John Geldhof, Richard Lerner 77 The Social Behaviour of Shy Children in a Familiar Peer Group Context Eugene Ji, Lynne Zarbatany, Xinyin Chen, Wendy Ellis 67 School-based Mentoring as a Pullout Versus Supplementary Intervention: The Influence of Meeting Time on Academic Achievement Sarah Schwartz, Jean Rhodes 78 Beyond Tomboys: Adolescent Girls’ Accommodation to Conventions of Masculinity Dana Edell, Elliott D. Smith, Nirit Gordon 68 The Masculine Self and its Relation to Aggression Tia Kim, Quay Dorsey 69 Relations Among Narcissism, Aggressive Behavior, and Social Cognition Emily Hart, Jamie Ostrov 79 Development of Expected Timing of Adult Role Transitions: Gender, Context, and Experience Lisa Crockett, Sarah Beal 70 "Nothing Really Matters": Emotional Numbing as a Link Between Trauma and Acquired Callousness Among Delinquent Youth Diana Bennett, Patricia Kerig, Mamie Thompson, Stephen Becker 80 Staying Within the Lines: Religious Exploration Styles of Religious Female Students Attending a Religious University Maya Cohen-Malayev 81 A Longitudinal Examination of Mexicanorigin Adolescent Mothers’ Discrimination, Acculturation, and Ethnic Identity Affirmation Chelsea Derlan, Adriana Umaña-Taylor, Russell Toomey, Kimberly Updegraff, Laudan Jahromi, Lluliana Flores 71 Adolescent Peer and Romantic Predictors of Youths’ Emotion Regulation in Early Adulthood David Szwedo, Joseph Allen, Joanna Chango, Megan Schad, Amanda Hare, Erin Miga, Ann Spilker, Caroline White, Amanda LeTard, Katy Higgins 82 Victimization as Mediator of Mental Health Disparities in Sexual Minority Youth Chad Burton, Michael Marshal, Deena Chisolm, Mark Friedman 72 A Longitudinal Study of Mother-toAdolescent Empathy Transmission Caspar van Lissa, Skyler Hawk, Minet de Wied, Wim Meeus 83 The influence of media on perceptions of healthy and unhealthy teen dating relationships Katrina Debnam, Donna Howard, Nancy Aiken, Sharon O'Brien 73 Adolescent and Primary Caregiver Concordance in Religiousness, Levels of Communication, and Adolescent Internalizing and Externalizing Behaviors Julee Farley, Gregory Longo, Jungmeen Kim-Spoon 84 Latent Class Regression Analysis for Describing Inconsistency in the Relationship Between Adolescents’ Engaged Living and Internet Addiction Jie-ting Zhang, Cheng-fu Yu, Min-qiang Zhang 74 Parental Provision of Structure and the Transition to Middle School Wendy Grolnick, Jacquelyn Raftery, Elizabeth Flamm, Kristine Marbell 75 Explaining the Role of Type D Personality in Adolescent Health Outcomes: The Case of Asthma Monique van de Ven, Dana Tiggelman, Onno van Schayck, Rutger Engels 107 Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm (Event 4-042) Paper Discussion Symposium East Ballroom Salon C Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 4-042. Stress and Substance Use among adolescents: Cool at Risk? Chair: Anja C. Huizink Discussant: Marc N. Potenza Stress Reactivity and Early Onset and Progression of Cannabis Use Anja Huizink, Andrea Prince van Leeuwen, Hanneke Creemers, Johan Ormel, Frank Verhulst Physiological stress responses to a social stress procedure in relation to substance use behavior in adolescents. Brittany Evans, Kirstin Greaves-Lord, Anja Euser, Joke Thulen, Ingmar Franken, Anja Huizink Stress and Imitation of Drinking Behavior. An Experimental Study in a (Semi-) naturalistic Context Helle Larsen, Rutger Engels, Isabella Granic, Anja Huizink Who Can I Turn to? When Traumatized Delinquent Youth Relinquish Parent Attachment, are Peers a Source of Risk or Resilience? Cristina Hudak, Patricia Kerig Stressors and Victimization in Sexual Minority Youth: Parenting as a Buffer Kristin Lindahl, Neena Malik, Hallie Bregman, Matthew Page The role of disclosure in predicting adolescent problem behavior: Contributions from youth, parents and older siblings Sabina Low, James Snyder, Joann Shortt Abuse and Attachment in Adolescent Dating Relationships: Peer, Sibling, and Parental Influences John Grych, Jessica Houston (Event 4-045) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 11 Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 4-045. Mitigating the Negative Effects of Racial/Ethnic Discrimination by Peers: Studies of Ethnically Diverse Youth Around the World Chair: Angela Ittel Discussant: William M. Bukowski Peer Racial Discrimination and Perceived Educational Opportunity: The Buffering Role of Proactive Preparation by Parents Deborah Rivas Drake, Dawn Paula Witherspoon Peer Discrimination and Negative Adjustment Among Ethnically Diverse College Students: Do Friends and Family Relations Help? Linda Juang, Angela Ittel, Frances Gottwald, Miriam Gallarin An Exploratory Study of Moderators In The Relationship Between Perceived Discrimination And Adaptation Of Immigrant Youth David Sam, Gabriel Horenczyk (Event 4-043) Roundtable East Meeting 1 Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 4-043. "Follow Us on Facebook": Use of Social Media as a Recruitment and Retention Tool in Adolescent Research Moderator: Mia A. Smith-Bynum Panelists: Eleanor Seaton, Tiffany Yip, Mia Smith-Bynum (Event 4-044) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 10 Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 4-044. Parents, Siblings, and Peers as Sources of Risk or Resilience for Youth Maladjustment Chair: Kristin Lindahl 108 (Event 4-046) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 12 Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 4-046. Specialized Mentoring Programs for Adolescents: Examining Different Models Chair: Gabriel P. Kuperminc Discussant: Nancy L. Deutsch “Somebody Who was on My Side”: A Qualitative Examination of Youth Initiated Mentoring in the National Guard Youth ChalleNGe Program Renee Spencer, Toni Tugenberg, Mia Ocean, Sarah Schwartz, Jean Rhodes Project MENTOR: A Holistic Health Mentoring Program Julia Pryce, David DuBois, Troy Harden, Yan Searcy, Orlando Davis Sustaining Mentoring Relationships in a Comprehensive Youth Development Program Kandi Felmet, Gabriel Kuperminc Jonathan Stange, Angelo Boccia, Benjamin Shapero, Megan Flynn, Lindsey Matt, Lyn Abramson, Lauren Alloy, Ashleigh Molz Positive Overgeneralization and Behavioral Approach System (BAS) Sensitivity Interact to Predict Prospective Increases in Hypomanic Symptoms: A Behavioral HighRisk Design Ashleigh Molz, Jonathan Stange, Chelsea Black, Benjamin Shapero, Joanna Bacelli, Lyn Abramson, Lauren Alloy (Event 4-048) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 14 Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 4-048. Implications of Youth Purpose for Positive Adjustment Chair: Jenni M. Mariano The Beyond-the-Self Dimension of Adolescent Purpose Brandy Quinn Beyond-the-Self Purpose Among the “Greatest Generation” Jenni Mariano, George Vaillant Purpose and Emotional Flourishing during Adolescence Anthony Burrow (Event 4-047) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 13 Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 4-047. Cognitive Styles and Risk for Bipolar Spectrum Disorders in Adolescents (Event 4-049) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 15 Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm Chair: Ashleigh R. Molz High BAS Sensitivity, Ambitious GoalStriving, and High Reward Responsiveness Predict First Onset of Bipolar Spectrum Disorders Lauren Alloy, Rachel Bender, Wayne Whitehouse, Clara Wagner, Richard Liu, David Grant, Shari Jager-Hyman, James Choi, Eddie Harmon-Jones, Lyn Abramson Do Extreme Beliefs About Internal States Predict Mood Swings in Undergraduate Samples? Alyson Dodd, Warren Mansell, Anthony Morrison, Richard Bentall, Sara Tai Cognitive Vulnerability and Emotion Regulation Characteristics Interact to Predict Depressive Symptoms in Individuals at Risk for Bipolar Disorder: A Prospective Study 4-049. Positive Approaches to Studying Adolescent Sexuality Development and Sexual Health Chairs: Miriam R. Arbeit, Edmond Bowers Because it Feels Good: Approach Motivation and Sexual Desire in Adolescent Girls and Emerging Adult Women Emily Impett, Amy Muise (continued) 109 "What do you like about that?" Power and pleasure in girls’ experience of fellatio Deborah Tolman Will it Help? Identifying Socialization Discourses that Promote Sexual Risk and Sexual Health Among African American Youth L. Monique Ward, Monica Foust Josephine Kearney, Kay Bussey Comparing Ideas about Why Adolescents Manage Information About Their Activities Håkan Stattin, Lauree Tilton-Weaver, Margaret Kerr (Event 4-051) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 18 Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:00 pm 4-051. School-Based and InternetBased Prevention of Depression in Adolescents. In What Setting Works Prevention Best for Whom? (Event 4-049.5) Emerging Scholar Session East Meeting 16 Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:00 pm 4-049.5. Emerging Scholars Event Coffee & Conversation II Chair: Patrick Pössel Moderators of Universal CognitiveBehavioral and Nonspecific Depression Prevention Programs for Adolescents Patrick Pössel, Nina Martin, Judy Garber Adolescent Experiences with Internet-based Depression Prevention: Challenges and Personal Progress Chid Iloabachie, Corrie Wells, Brady Goodwin, Tracy Gladstone, Benjamin Van Voorhees Long-Term Effects of a Primary Care Internet-Based Depression Preventive Intervention for At-Risk Adolescents Tracy Gladstone, Katie Richards, Monika Marko-Holguin, Benjamin Van Voorhees Moderator: Andrea Finlay Cross-Cultural Research Raija-Leena Punamäki Writing a CV/Resumé and Navigating the Job Market Moin Syed How to "Network" at a Conference Rob Crosnoe Things I Wish I Knew as a First or Second Year Grad Student Jessie Wong Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm (Event 4-050) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 17 Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 4-050. Information Management: What Enhances or Inhibits Adolescents' Willingness to Provide Information to Their Parents? Chair: Lauree Tilton-Weaver Discussant: Nancy Darling What Promotes Adolescent Disclosure of Information? Sheila Marshall Does Misbehavior Account for What Parents Miss? The Longitudinal Impact of Communication and Delinquency on Adolescent Disclosure 110 (Event 4-052) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 19 Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm (Event 4-054) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 3 Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 4-052. The Role of School Belonging in Improving Educational and Psychological Outcomes for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Youth 4-054. Popularity and Adolescent Friendships: Friendship Quality, Peer Attraction, and Friendship Networks Chair: Mark Bartkiewicz Discussant: Joseph G. Kosciw Educational Aspirations of LGBT Youth: The Interplay of Supportive School Efforts and School Belonging Mark Bartkiewicz Teacher Intervention and School Connections Effecting Academic Achievement Among LGBT Students Thomas Clarke Relational Aggression, School Belonging, and Psychological Outcomes among Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Adolescents in School Settings Ryan Kull Chair: Melanie Joly Adolescent Friendship Networks: Associations with Popularity and Relational Aggression John Houser, Lara Mayeux Popularity and Patterns of Attraction during Early Adolescence Melanie Joly, William Bukowski Popularity and Friendship Quality among Adolescents Peter Marks, Nicki Crick (Event 4-055) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 7 Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm (Event 4-053) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 2 Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 4-055. Youth in Military Families: Well-Being, Stress, and Coping During the Conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq 4-053. Parents and Peers Make a Difference: Building Social and Psychological Well-Being From Adolescence Into Young Adulthood Chair: Stacy A. Hawkins Stress and Well-Being Among Youth in Military Families: Examination of A Model of Resilience and Vulnerability Angela Huebner, Jay Mancini The Experience of Military Youth and Families: Perspectives of Youth, Parents, and School Staff Anita Chandra, Sandraluz Lara-Cinisomo, Rachel Burns, Laurie Martin, Amy Richardson, Stacy Hawkins, Bing Han, Lisa Jaycox, Terri Tanielian, Teague Ruder Double Duty: Experiences of Youth in Dual Military Families Stacy Hawkins, Gabriel Schlomer, Christine Bracamonte Wiggs, Gene Fisher, Lynne Borden Chair: Rachel Yeung Thompson Discussant: Jennifer Connolly Parent and Friend Emotional Support Matters: Preventing Increases in Peer Victimization and Internalizing Problems Into Young Adulthood Rachel Yeung Thompson, Bonnie Leadbeater Parent, Peer, and Individual Predictors of Change in Romantic Relational Aggression and Victimization Paweena Sukhawathanakul, Bonnie Leadbeater, Rachel Yeung Thompson The Long-Term and Sustainable Impact of Parents’ Support of Psychological Needs During Adolescence on Young Adults’ WellBeing Frederick Grouzet 111 (Event 4-056) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 8 Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm Saturday, 3:30 pm - 5:00 pm (Event 4-058) Poster Session 12 Exhibit Hall B Saturday, 3:30 pm - 5:00 pm 4-056. The Dynamic Role of Parents Over the Course of Adolescents’ Activities: Insights into Enrollment, Participation, and Consequences Chair: Sandi Simpkins Intergenerational Continuity and Discontinuity in Mexican-origin Youths’ Participation in Organized Activities: Insights from Mixed-Methods Sandi Simpkins, Andrea Vest, Chara Price Social and Dyadic Time with Mothers and Fathers: Developmental Patterns and Adjustment Correlates Chun Bun Lam, Susan McHale Parental Support of Youth Program Participation Hyeyoung Kang, Marcela Raffaelli, Steve Tran Revisiting the Over-Scheduling Hypothesis: Adolescent Activity Participation and the Mother-Child Relationship Adam Sheppard, Joseph Mahoney (Event 4-057) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 9 Saturday, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm 4-057. Sibling Collusion and Modeling in Adolescence: Family Context and Implications for Problem Behaviors Chair: Anna Solmeyer Discussant: Scott Gest Sibling Collusion in Context: Family and Individual Correlates Mark Feinberg, Anna Solmeyer, Susan McHale The Contribution of Sibling Collusion to Adolescent Externalizing Behaviors: Parent, Sibling, and Peer Influences Naomi Knoble, Joann Shortt, Stacey Tiberio Sibling Influences on Adolescents’ Substance Use Orientations: Testing Competing Pathways of Social Influence Shawn Whiteman, Alexander Jensen, Umadevi Senguttuvan 112 1 Too Cool for School? The Relationship between Being Cool and Academic Effort in the First Year of Middle School Rhonda Jamison, Allison Ryan 2 Love types and Subjective Well-Being among Young Peoples: What is the Impact of Culture? Filiz Yildirim, Rosemary Barnett, Sengul Hablemitoglu 3 Are Early Adolescents’ Dysregulated Emotions and Prosocial Behaviors Mediated by Classroom Supportiveness? Lina Sweiss, Jennifer Hanson, Nancy Norman, Jenna Whitehead, Kimberly Schonert-Reichl 4 Examination of Pubertal Development: Modeling Timing and Tempo A. Nayena Blankson, Sonya Negriff, Penelope Trickett 5 Risk Taking as Response to Mental Constriction Julia Tang, Jason Siegel 6 Links between reactions to academic situations and depression: The moderating roles of gender and physiological reactivity to academic stress Anne Brady, Jennifer Law, Erin Shoulberg, Dianna Murray-Close 7 Adolescent Mothers’ Parenting Beliefs: Examining the Effects of a Home-Based Intervention Lorraine McKelvey, Nicola Conners-Burrow, Leanne Whiteside-Mansell, Taren Swindle, Pam Plummer, Latunja Sockwell 8 Parents’ Marital Dissatisfaction and Adolescents’ Peer Aggression: The Role of Secure Base Relationships Jonathon Beckmeyer 9 Exploring Felt Obligation in Emerging Adults’ Families with the Actor-Partner Interdependence Model (APIM) Annalisa Rossi Del Corso, Margherita Lanz, Semira Tagliabue 19 School-Based Extracurricular Activities and Psychosocial Outcomes among Rural Adolescents Allison Shepard, Alison Ludden 20 Authenticity Associated with Adult-Directed Leisure Activities Gira Bhatt, Roger Tweed, Stephen Dooley, Jodi Viljoen, Kevin Douglas, Nathalie Gagnon 10 Urban and Rural Chinese Adolescents’ Perceptions of Democratic Family and School Environment and Psychological Wellbeing Sharon To, Charles Helwig, Shaogang Yang 21 Paternal and Contextual Factors and Academic Achievement Among MexicanAmerican Adolescents Mario Fernandez, Megan O'Donnell, Mark Roosa 11 Relational therapeutic techniques as predictors of change among substanceabusing runaway adolescents and their parents Denitza Bantchevska, Natasha Slesnick 22 50% but Only Half of the Way There: Increasing Workforce Participation for Graduates with Developmental Disabilities Catherine Loiselle, Shannahn McInnis, Yasaman Jalali-Kushki, Gurit Lotan, Tara Flanagan 12 Family Instability and Mexican American Adolescents' Academic Outcomes: Examining Familism as a Moderator Danyel Vargas, Mark Roosa, George Knight, Megan O'Donnell 13 The Impacts of Nonresident Fatherhood and Father Involvement on Adolescent Romantic Ideals Melissa Horne, Rebecca Ryan 23 Reciprocal Influences between Adolescent Substance Use and Academic Engagement among Mexican American Youth Jessie Wong, Nancy Gonzales, Larry Dumka, Michaeline Jensen 14 Negative Parenting and Late Adolescents’ Mental Health: The Protective Function of Relationships with Grandparents Kristen Rabe, Bethany Quinn, Laura Pittman 24 Examining Cyber Bullying Factors among Adolescents: A Grounded Theory Approach Hanif Abu Bakar 15 A Latent Class Analysis of Parenting Style in Early Adolescence: Prediction to Sexual Risk-Taking in Mid-Adolescence H. Isabella Lanza, David Huang, Debra Murphy, Yih-Ing Hser 25 Parent Involvement, Academic Encouragement by Significant Others, and School Climate Related to Adolescents’ Academic Outcomes Dorothy Chien, Scott Plunkett, Andrew Behnke, Carolyn Henry 16 Gender Differences in Early Adolescents’ Self-disclosure to Siblings and Best Friends Nina Howe, Brynheld Martinez 26 Predictors of Investigative Occupational Goals: The Importance of Teachers Karen Jackson, Marie-Anne Suizzo 17 Early Exposure to Family Conflict and Community Violence: Associations with Behavioral Adjustment at Age 11 Lorraine McKelvey, Hiram Fitzgerald, Robert Bradley, Leanne Whiteside-Mansell, Nicola Conners-Burrow, Rachel Schiffman 27 Who Is a “Good Citizen”? Perspectives of the Majority and Minority Youth in the Czech Republic Zuzana Petrovicova, Jan Serek, Petr Macek 28 Immigrant Youth and Families and Out-ofSchool Time Programs: Identifying Effective Practices Michelle Porche, Sviatlana Smashnaya, Jennifer Grossman, Diane Gruber, Georgia Hall 18 An Under-represented Group? Prevalence of Research on Rural Adolescents in the Empirical Literature Brandy Randall, Tommy Phillips, Keilah Thompson 113 29 Romantic Partners and Quality of Employment as Predictors of Health during the Transition into the Workforce: A Gendered Phenomenon Jose Domene, Rubab Arim 40 Sexual Risk Behaviors Among Adolescent Males and Females Engaging in Oppositeand Same- Sex Sexual Activity From 20042010 Michael Merten, Amanda Williams, Micah Hall, Julie Trainum 30 Familial Socialization of Mexican-American Adolescents’ Family Obligation and Assistance Kim Tsai, Eva Telzer, Thomas Weisner, Andrew Fuligni, Nancy Gonzales 41 Depressive Feelings and Self Efficacy Explaining the Link Between Asthma and Smoking Linda Ringlever, Roy Otten, Onno van Schayck, Rutger Engels 31 Validation of the Resilience Competencies Scale for Applications among American Indian Adolescents Melanie Hockenberry, Carol Markstrom, Jessica Troilo, Kristin Moilanen 42 Profiles of sensation seeking and its relationship with cigarette and alcohol use among chilean adolescents. Paula Repetto, Yerko Molina 32 Reducing Stigma Toward the Transgender Community: An Evaluation of a Humanizing and Perspective-Taking Intervention Fatemeh Ordoubadi, Tanya Tompkins, Kimberly Hillman 43 The Effect of Social Context on Children’s Social Information Processing: Coping Response Selection Kelly Cromer, Bridgette Harper, Gregory Clark 33 The Relationship Between Religious Identity and Beliefs and Attitudes About Homosexuality Among Emerging Adults Timothy Tasker, Stacey Horn, Marcy Hochberg, Katherine Romeo 44 Electronic Aggression Among Emerging Adults: Frequency and Motivations Ilana Kellerman, Briana Wagner, Nicole Parisi, Chelsea Massoud, Larissa Borofsky, Brian Baucom, Michelle Ramos, Gayla Margolin 35 Correlates on Black American Adolescent Drinking Behavior: A Cross-Context Study Dustin Mars, Michael Cunningham 45 Daily School Bullying Experiences, WellBeing and School Adjustment Among Mexican-American Adolescents Guadalupe Espinoza, Andrew Fuligni 36 Body Image, Depression, and Tanning Behaviors Among College Students Meghan Gillen, Charlotte Markey 46 Familial, Intrapersonal and Interpersonal Correlates of Relational Peer Victimization Among Chinese Adolescents: a Mediated Model Shujun Wang, Wei Zhang, Shuangju Zhen, Chengfu Yu 37 Salience of Contexts in the Etiology of Adolescent Antisocial Behavior: The Moderating Role of Future Orientation Pan Chen, Elena Tuskenis, Kristen Jacobson 38 Coping with Racial Discrimination: The Impact of Racial Socialization and Personality on Health Teneisha McIntyre, Enrique Neblett Jr. 47 The Importance of Considering Frequency and Duration of Victimization When Assessing Risk for Depression and Suicidal Ideation Rina Bonanno, Shelley Hymel 39 Access and Barriers to Resources that Support Parents as Sex Educators: Parent Focus Group Data on Family, Race/Ethnicity, and the Community Nicole Ja, Jennifer Tiffany 48 Peer Interracial Climate Predicting Late Adolescent Behavior and Satisfaction in Same- and Cross-Ethnicity Romantic Relationships Natalie Sadler, Adrienne Nishina 114 49 Adolescents' Gossip within the Context of Friendship: The Impact on Peer Likability and Popularity Julie Wargo Aikins, Charlene Collibee, Amanda LeTard Leslie MacIntyre, Heather Sears 60 Write On: The Effects of Participation in a Writing Program on Writing Achievement and Academic and Social Efficacies Su Langdon, Christine Grover 50 Reasons for Terminating Same- and CrossGender Friendships in Late Adolescence Jessica McGuire, Campbell Leaper 61 Impact of Parent Management Training on Risk for Depressive Symptoms in Adolescence Callie Brockman, James Snyder, Ryan Sinclair, Samantha Eskridge, Sarah Staats, Marion Forgatch 51 Love and Friendship in the Time of HIV: The Close Relationships of Emerging Adults with HIV Olivia Hsin, Annette La Greca, Lawrence Friedman, Donna Maturo, Hanna MajorWilson 62 Utilizing Rumination to Identify Adolescents at High Risk for Depression Cara Young, Mary Dietrich 52 Teens Talking to Friends: Co-Rumination, Social Support, and Internalizing Symptoms Esti Iturralde, Lauren Spies, Gayla Margolin 63 Emotion Regulation and Impulsivity Moderates Suicide Risk Associated with ADHD Kathryn Van Eck, Kate Flory, Sara Schmidt 53 Same and Opposite Sex Peer Likability: Friendship and Mating Strategy Sayaka Aoki, Marla Brassard 64 Developmental Trajectories of Symptoms of PTSD Among Adolescents After the 2008 Wenchuan Earthquake in China Yuhong Zheng, Fang Fan, Guanghua Du, Tingchen Luo 54 Loyalty to the Group or Doing Your Own Thing? Adolescents’ Understanding of Group Dynamics Kelly Lynn Mulvey, Aline Hitti, Shelby Cooley, Adam Rutland, Dominic Abrams, Laura Elenbaas, Melanie Killen 65 The Moderating and Mediating Effects of Resilience Between Negative Life Events and Depression Symptoms Among Adolescents Following the 2008 Wenchuan Earthquake in China Qing Zhu, Fang Fan, Shixiu Sun, Lu Zhang, Yuhong Zheng 55 Different Network Features of Friends, Helpers and Admired Peers: Network Structures and Segregation Huiyoung Shin, Allison Ryan 66 Investigating the Stress-Depression Association in Adolescents Amy Paysnick, Keith Burt 56 Is It Possible to Experience Flow in Prosocial Activities? Is It Possible to Experience Flow in Prosocial Activities? An Argentinian Study. Belén Mesurado, María Richaud 67 Possible Selves: A Contextual Approach to Adolescent and Emerging Adulthood Identity and Transitions Anne Marshall, Breanna Lawrence, Kate Creedon, Tanya Ward 57 Emerging Adults’ Sexual Behaviors: Associations of Parental Behaviors and Attachment Security Donna Hancock, Leslie Simons 68 Concurrent and long-term associations between meaning-making and well-being within emerging adults’ turning points Royette Tavernier, Teena Willoughby 58 Aggressive Humor Use in Romantic Relationships: A Developmental Perspective Sally Kuo, Jessica Salvatore, Ryan Steele, Jeffry Simpson, W Andrew Collins 69 ‘OVK’ a Universal School-based Depression Prevention and Resiliency Training for Dutch Adolescents: Pilot Study and Research Plan. Yuli Tak, Rinka Van Zundert, Rutger Engels 59 Social Experiences and Individual Characteristics Predicting Adolescents’ Intentions of Seeking Help from Specific Peers 115 70 Building Youth into Organizational Management Increases Youth 21st Century Skills Laurie Van Egeren, Jamie Heng-Chieh Wu, Meenal Rana, Tom Akiva 81 Men at the Crossroads: Profiling hypermasculinity with a sample of collegiate males. Charles Corprew 82 Narrative Construction in At-Risk Adolescents and the Hazards of Reflecting on Difficult Experiences Becky Wood, Kate McLean, Andrea Breen 71 Trajectories of Physical and Relational Aggression Among Adolescent Girls Kathryn Kimball, Sharon Foster, Judy Andrews 83 Preadolescents’ Negotiation of Ethnic Identity in a Diverse School Cari Gillen-O'Neel, Rashmita Mistry, Kirby Chow, Elizabeth White 72 A Longitudinal Look at the Associations Between Attachment and Psychosocial Adjustment in Adolescence Holly Roelse, Chong-Man Chow, Duane Buhrmester 84 College Students' Beliefs about whether their Gender, Ethnicity, or Social Class Influenced their Choice of Majors and Career Goals Samir Bedrouni, Margarita Azmitia 73 Adolescents’ Perceptions of Parental Deterrents as Predictors of High-Risk Behaviors Charlie (Carroll) Campbell 74 Emotion Socialization Influences in a Sample of High-Risk Adolescents Amanda Morris, Michael Criss, Benjamin Houltberg, Cara Bosler, Lixian Cui Saturday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm (Event 4-060) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 10 Saturday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 75 Traditional vs Online Victimization and STEM Performance Among High School Students Brendesha Tynes, Chad Rose 4-060. Subjective Social Status and Well-Being among Adolescents and Emerging Adults 76 Differences in Daily Life Experiences Between School Adjusted and Maladjusted Early Adolescents Meery Lee Chair: Elizabeth I. Johnson Discussant: Elizabeth Goodman Obesity-Related Behaviors Among Poor Adolescents and Young Adults: Can Social Position Determine Who Is Most At Risk? Miranda Ritterman Weintraub, Lia Fernald, Elizabeth Goodman, Sylvia Guendelman, Nancy Adler Subjective Social Status and Early Adolescents’ Responses to Daily Events Elizabeth Johnson Subjective Social Status and Positive Indicators of Well-Being Rebekah Linn, Jennifer Phagan, Elizabeth Johnson 77 The Relationship Between Reading Motivation and Academic Ability in Low Performing Adolescent Readers Carlton Fong, Jill Boelter, Michael VadenKiernan, Sarah Caverly 78 Trajectories and Covariates for Industry, Identity, and Intimacy During the Transition to Adulthood Dayuma Vargas Lascano, Nancy Galambos, Wendy Hoglund 79 Integrating Two Models of Intentional SelfRegulation in Adolescence: Academic SOC and Action-Control Beliefs G. John Geldhof 80 Relationships Between Religious Values and Trait Hope: A one-year Longitudinal Analysis Patrick Heaven, Joseph Ciarrochi 116 (Event 4-061) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 11 Saturday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm (Event 4-063) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 13 Saturday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 4-061. Parental Influence on Adolescents’ Intergroup Attitudes and Relationships 4-063. Managing Negativity in the Context of Close Relationships: Implications for Adolescents' Social and Emotional Adjustment Chair: Alaina Brenick Parental Encouragement of Relationships With African-American, Latino, and White Peers Nina Mounts, David Valentiner, Jennifer Karre Minority-group Parents and Their Children’s Majority-group Friendships: The Effect of What Parents say and do Anke Munniksma, Tobias Stark, Andreas Flache, Rene Veenstra Parental Role Models in the Development of Adolescents’ Intergroup Attitudes Burkhard Gniewosz, Peter Noack Peer, Parent, and Community Attitudes and Jewish-American Adolescents’ Evaluations of Arab-Jewish Intergroup Exclusion Alaina Brenick, Melanie Killen Chair: Thao Ha The Blues of Adolescent Romance: Observed Affective Interactions in Adolescent Romantic Relationships in Association with Depressive Symptoms Thao Ha, Thomas Dishion, William Burk, Geertjan Overbeek, Rutger Engels From Repairing Emotions to Maintaining Relations: Predictions from Emotional Functioning to Later Relationships Elenda Hessel, David Szwedo, Joseph Allen Adolescent Friendship Quality and Emotional Adjustment: Examining the Role of Mothers’ Own Friendships Gary Glick, Amanda Rose, Lance Swenson, Erika Waller (Event 4-062) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 12 Saturday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm (Event 4-064) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 14 Saturday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 4-062. Promoting Adolescents’ Developmental Competencies Following the Transition to High School 4-064. Factors Mediating Adolescents’ Problematic Use of the Internet Chair: Aprile Benner Discussant: Sandra Graham It Gets Better: Teaching Adolescents That People Can Change Reduces Stress and Improves Achievement David Yeager, Brian Spitzer, Rebecca Johnson, Carol Dweck Adolescents Defying the Odds: School, Peers, and Educational Pathways From High School to College Rashmita Mistry, Aprile Benner Buffering Effects of Economic Hardship on Rural Youth’s Educational Beliefs: Examination of Family, School and Community Factors Dawn Paula Witherspoon, Vonnie McLoyd Chair: Stefanie Y. Chye Problematic Internet Use Amongst High and Low-Achieving Singaporean Adolescents: The Role of Social-Emotional Competencies and Social Anxiety Stefanie Chye, Vivien Huan, Rebecca Ang, Wan Har Chong Problematic Internet Use: The Mediating Role of Academic Expectation Stress on Adolescents with Varying Social Emotional Competencies. Wan Har Chong, Stefanie Chye, Vivien Huan, Rebecca Ang (continued) 117 Loneliness as a Mediating Factor in Predicting Problematic Internet Use Among Shy Adolescents Vivien Huan, Rebecca Ang, Wan Har Chong, Stefanie Chye (Event 4-065) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 15 Saturday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 4-065. Pulling Themselves Up or Getting Dragged Down: Diverse Pathways in Adolescent Risk-Taking Kevin King, Jeremy Luk, Johnny Wu, Katie Witkiewitz, Sarah Racz, Robert McMahon Development of Late Adolescent Conduct Problems and Borderline Mood Features in Children with Early Externalizing Problems Yuko Okado, Karen Bierman Tests of a Causal Effect of Childhood Abuse on Adult Borderline Personality Disorder Traits: A Longitudinal Discordant Twin Design Marina Bornovalova, Brooke Huibregtse, Brian Hicks, Margaret Keyes, Matt McGue, William Iacono (Event 4-067) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 18 Saturday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm Chair: Kathryn Modecki Discussant: Nancy Guerra Patterns of Antisocial Behavior from Adolescence to Early Adulthood: The Development of Psychosocial Maturity Kathryn Monahan, Laurence Steinberg, Elizabeth Cauffman, Edward Mulvey It’s Why They Call it Bad Company: Risky Peers in Structured Activities and Trajectories of Risk Kathryn Modecki, Bonnie Barber, Corey Blomfield Lifestyles of the Rich and Stable: Patterns of Risk-taking and Delinquency Among Affluent Youth Jordan Bechtold, Kathryn Monahan, Elizabeth Cauffman, Susan Campbell 4-067. Quality of relationship in school-based mentoring programs Chair: Christian S. Chan Discussant: Renee Spencer Measuring quality of mentoring relationship Max Wu, Christian Chan, Jean Rhodes Pathways of influence in School-Based Mentoring: The mediating role of parent and teacher relationships Christian Chan, Sarah Schwartz, Jean Rhodes, Sarah Lowe, Waylon Howard Relationship quality and duration in schoolbased mentoring: Does same-gender match matter? Stella Kanchewa, Sarah Schwartz, Jean Rhodes, Lauren Olsho (Event 4-066) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 17 Saturday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 4-066. Vulnerabilities for the Development of Externalizing, Antisocial, and Borderline Psychopathology: Longitudinal Investigations Chair: Yuko Okado Discussant: Byron R. Egeland The Externalizing Spectrum From Childhood to Young Adulthood: Longitudinal Relations Within an Integrated Developmental Model 118 (Event 4-068) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 19 Saturday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm (Event 4-070) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 3 Saturday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 4-068. Purpose in Domains: Entrepreneurship, Academics, and Community Involvement as Purposeful Pursuits 4-070. Sexual subjectivity in late adolescence and emerging adulthood in Australia, Belgium and the United States: An examination of cultural and gender specificities Chair: Timothy S. Reilly Discussant: Kendall C. Bronk Youth Purpose and life goals of Brazilian high school students engaged in community and social work Ulisses Araújo Academic Purpose in the Transition to College Matthew Andrews Emerging Adult Entrepreneurial Purpose: An Interview Study Timothy Reilly Chair: Marie-Aude Boislard Discussant: Melanie J. Zimmer-Gembeck Sexual Subjectivity, Relationship Status and Quality, and Same-sex Sexual Experience among Emerging Adult Females in Australia Marie-Aude Boislard, Melanie ZimmerGembeck Are Virgins Happier? Sexual Behavior and Subjectivity Predicting Romantic Attachment for Adolescent Girls and Boys in Belgium Wim Beyers, Stefanie De Meyer A Dyadic Perspective on Sexual Subjectivity and Romantic Relationship Functioning during Emerging Adulthood in the U.S. Brittany Kohlberger, Valerie Simon (Event 4-069) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 2 Saturday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm (Event 4-071) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 7 Saturday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 4-069. Status Hierarchies in the Classroom: Effects on Bullying and on Status Rewards for Aggressive and Prosocial Behaviors 4-071. U.S. Families in Economic Turmoil: Associations Between Family Economic Hardships, Parent Processes, and Adolescent Outcomes Chair: Claire F. Garandeau Discussant: Ernest V. Hodges Classroom Status Hierarchy and Adolescents’ Bullying, Victimization and Social Anxiety: Concurrent and Longitudinal Associations Claire Garandeau, Ihno Lee, Christina Salmivalli Explaining the Status-Aggression Link: The Role of Status Hierarchy and Reproductive Hierarchy in the Class Context Jan Kornelis Dijkstra, Michiel Zwaan, Rene Veenstra Longitudinal Relations between Children’s Social Status and Behaviors: Effects of Classroom Friendship Centralization and Density Hai-Jeong Ahn, Philip Rodkin Chair: Carly Tubbs Discussant: Pamela Morris How Income Volatility Affects Parental Stress and Adolescents' School Outcomes Sharon Wolf, Lisa Gennetian, Heather Hill, Pamela Morris Disentangling Financial Strain: Pathways Between Changes in Family Income and Adolescent Outcomes Carly Tubbs, Diane Hughes The Interactive Effect of Perceived Financial Strain and Paternal Depressive Symptoms on Adolescent-Directed Father Hostility Ben Reeb, Katherine Conger, Monica Martin 119 (Event 4-072) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 8 Saturday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm (Event 4-073) Paper Discussion Symposium East Meeting 9 Saturday, 3:45 pm - 5:15 pm 4-072. SIENA Models for Negative Relationships and Behavior Dynamics 4-073. Stress Response and Adolescent Adjustment: Integrating Findings across Depression, Anger Regulation, and Substance Use Outcomes Chair: Rene Veenstra Discussant: William J. Burk Influence and Selection Processes in Bullying and Bystander Behaviour in Early Adolescents' Friendships Sabrina Ruggieri, Thomas Friemel, Fabio Sticca, Françoise Alsaker, Sonja Perren Competition, Envy or Snobbism? How Status Affects the Structure and Development of Adolescents’ Antipathy Networks Christian Berger, Jan Dijkstra A Multivariate Longitudinal Social Network Study of Relations Between Victims With the Same Bullies: General Like and Defending Gijs Huitsing, Marijtje van Duijn, Tom Snijders, Rene Veenstra Chair: Tara Chaplin Discussant: Elizabeth Susman Stress Response and Adolescents’ Adjustment: The Impact of Child Maltreatment Emily Cook Interplay Between Key Fronto-Limbic Structures and the HPA axis in Depressed and Well Adolescents: A Preliminary Study Bonnie Klimes-Dougan, Georges Han, Leah Jappe, Alaa Houri, Daniel Keefe, Kelvin Lim, Kathryn Cullen Adolescent Physiological Response to Family Conflict: Associations with Alcohol Use Initiation Tara Chaplin 120 AUTHOR INDEX Abaied, Jamie jamie.abaied@uvm.edu 2-004, 2-044 Adelson, Emilya eadelson@tulane.edu 3-024 (66) Alegre, Alberto merchalbert@yahoo.es 3-051 (72) Abbott, Robert D. abbottr@uw.edu 2-005 (61) Adler, Nancy Nancy.Adler@ucsf.edu 4-060 Alexander, Kendra P. kpalexander@u.northwestern.edu 3-051 (16) Abelmann, Nancy nabelman@illinois.edu 4-005 (30) Adler-Baeder, Francesca M. adlerfr@auburn.edu 4-041 (66) Alfieri, Sara sara.alfieri@unicatt.it 2-005 (30) Aber, Lawrence la39@nyu.edu 2-038, 2-053 Adrian, Molly adriam@uw.edu 2-036, 3-051 (70), 4-005 (58), 4-035 Ali, Alisha alisha.ali@nyu.edu 3-025 Abrams, Dominic D.Abrams@kent.ac.uk 3-044 (74), 3-051 (3), 4-058 (54) Agans, Jennifer jennifer.agans@tufts.edu 2-042 (18) Alisat, Susan salisat@wlu.ca 2-042 (24), 2-042 (78), 2-074, 3-038, 3-038, 3-051 (71) Abramson, Lyn Y. lyabrams@wisc.edu 2-036, 2-036, 3-006 (77), 3-024 (61), 3-051 (1), 3-067, 4-047, 4-047, 4-047 Ahiadeke, Clement clemahia@live.com 2-060 (9) Abu Bakar, Hanif S. hanifsuhairi@unimap.edu.my 4-058 (24) Ackman, Jeffrey jdackman@shrinenet.org 3-006 (14) Acock, Alan alan.acock@oregonstate.edu 2-053 Ahn, Hai-Jeong hahn2@illinois.edu 2-038, 4-069 Aiken, Nancy naiken@chanabaltimore.org 4-041 (83) Aikins, Julie W. Julie.Aikins@uconn.edu 4-023 (46) Adams, Adi ama20@bath.ac.uk 4-005 (82) Akiva, Tom akiva@umich.edu 2-013, 2-013, 3-044 (26), 4-005 (16), 4-058 (70) Adams, Elizabeth A. adamsliz@email.unc.edu 2-024 (22), 4-023 (29) Al-Dabbagh, Wissam waldabba@uoguelph.ca 2-042 (78) Adams, Heidi L. heidi.adams@asu.edu 3-059 Alamar, Amy aalamar@stanford.edu 2-024 (21) Adams, Paula padams@wsu.edu 2-005 (83) Alampay, Liane P. lpalampay@ateneo.edu 4-005 (42) Adams, Ryan E. Ryan.Adams@cchmc.org 4-023 (27) Albrecht, Erin C. ealbrec@rams.colostate.edu 4-005 (9) Addis, Michael E. MAddis@clarku.edu 3-044 (71) Aldridge, Matthew ma354@cornell.edu 2-008 121 Allegretti, Christine L. allegrec@queens.edu 3-044 (54) Allen, Joseph P. allen@virginia.edu 2-042 (55), 2-042 (56), 3-006 (56), 3013, 3-013, 3-021, 3-024 (75), 3-041, 3-067, 4-005 (49), 4-041 (71), 4-063 Allen, Nicholas nba@unimelb.edu.au 2-012, 2-030, 3-006 (1), 3-006 (59) Alloy, Lauren B. lalloy@temple.edu 2-036, 2-036, 2-036, 3-006 (77), 3-051 (1), 3-067, 4-047, 4-047, 4-047 Allred, Candace Candace.Allred@utah.edu 4-003 Almas, Alisa N. aalmas@umd.edu 4-031 Alsaker, Françoise alsaker@psy.unibe.ch 3-024 (43), 3-027, 3-031, 4-072 Alvarado-Koperberg, Fabiola ilse.alvarado.464@my.csun.edu 2-005 (46) Alvarez, Jose alvarezja24@gmail.com 3-006 (19) Alvarez-Valdivia, Ibis M. IbisMarlene.Alvarez@uab.cat 3-065 Ames, Megan E. mames@yorku.ca 3-051 (15), 3-051 (33) Ames, Morgan morgan.ames@mnsu.edu 3-051 (70) Amnå, Erik erik.amna@oru.se 3-020 Amsel, Eric eamsel@weber.edu 4-005 (39), 4-023 (2) Anderson, Emily emanders@linfield.edu 4-023 (84) Anderson, Eric ericandersonphd@aol.com 4-005 (82) Anderson, Kristen G. andersok@reed.edu 2-005 (32) Anderson, Sara sara.anderson@tufts.edu 2-060 (15) Anderson, Stephanie steph.m.anderson@gmail.com 3-049 Andrade, Claudia perdigao.caudia@gmail.com 3-024 (49) Andrade, Diana diana.andrade@nyu.edu 3-024 (81) Andrews, Judy A. judy@ori.org 4-058 (71) Andrews, Matthew matthew.c.andrews76@gmail.com 4-068 Andrews, Naomi C. naomi.andrews@asu.edu 3-006 (51) Ang, Rebecca P. rpang@ntu.edu.sg 4-064, 4-064, 4-064 Anschutz, Doeschka d.j.Anschutz@uva.nl 2-054 Anthis, Kristine anthisk1@southernct.edu 2-060 (79) Anthony, Elizabeth K. elizabeth.anthony@asu.edu 2-005 (8), 2-005 (36) Anton, Triin triina@email.arizona.edu 3-024 (5) Aoki, Sayaka sa2392@columbia.edu 4-058 (53) Apiwattanalunggarn, Kunlakarn lekskul@yahoo.com 2-005 (67) Araújo, Ulisses F. uliarau@usp.br 4-068 Arbeit, Miriam R. Miriam.Arbeit@tufts.edu 4-049 Aregbesola, Temi taregbesola@bronxpride.org 4-023 (37) Arel, Sari sarel@umich.edu 2-042 (57) Arger, Christopher A. argerc@spu.edu 2-005 (66) Arim, Rubab G. rarim@ohri.ca 4-005 (1), 4-023 (26), 4-058 (29) Armstrong, Jeffrey M. jmarmstrong2@wisc.edu 2-012, 2-042 (73), 2-067 Arnett, Jeffrey J. arnett@jeffreyarnett.com 2-076, 3-043, 4-029 Arnocky, Steven stevena@nipissingu.ca 2-002 Arnone, Gina garnone@dolphin.upenn.edu 4-023 (80), 4-041 (22) 122 Arola, Nicole narola@luc.edu 2-024 (18) Arria, Amelia M. aarria@umd.edu 4-041 (32) Arvidsson, Toi Sin Y. doroui@gmail.com 2-024 (11) Asante, Elizabeth A. eliz_asante@yahoo.co.uk 2-060 (9) Asendorpf, Jens B. jens.asendorpf@online.de 2-033 Ashiabi, Godwin ashiabig@yahoo.com 2-024 (7) Ashley, Olivia S. osilber@rti.org 3-051 (36) Asscher, Jessica j.j.asscher@uva.nl 2-060 (73) Assor, Avi assor@bgu.ac.il 2-032 Athenour, Dylan athenourd@spu.edu 2-005 (66) Aucoin, Christine caucoin@uottawa.ca 2-005 (59) August, Elana G. elana.august@gmail.com 2-042 (82), 3-006 (71) Augustine, Mairin E. mairinea@gmail.com 2-018, 3-051 (76), 4-012, 4-023 (72) Austin, S. Bryn bryn.austin@childrens.harvard.edu 2-023, 2-023, 4-021 Ayala, Alicia A. alicia.ayala.62@my.csun.edu 3-024 (19) Ayoub, Fadi Fadi806@gmail.com 2-032 Bagwell, Catherine L. cbagwell@richmond.edu 2-024 (47), 2-060 (46) Banks, Donice donicem@gmail.com 3-044 (73) Ayvar, Ariana ariana.ayvar.805@my.csun.edu 2-005 (82) Baiden, John jonbaiden@gmail.com 3-044 (36) Bantchevska, Denitza ddenn2@gmail.com 4-058 (11) Azmitia, Margarita azmitia@ucsc.edu 2-032, 2-032, 3-044 (23), 4-005 (80), 4-058 (84) Bailey, Ashley ashleybailey93@yahoo.com 2-005 (75) Barber, Bonnie L. b.barber@murdoch.edu.au 3-051 (83), 4-065 Bailey, Jennifer A. jabailey@uw.edu 3-032, 3-032, 3-032 Barber, Carolyn barberce@umkc.edu 3-006 (52), 4-023 (24) Bailey, Lisa D. lsbailey@cnmc.org 2-005 (43) Baril, Megan mew237@psu.edu 4-041 (17) Baiocco, Roberto roberto.baiocco@uniroma1.it 2-005 (47), 3-024 (47), 4-005 (23) Barkan, Susan barkas@u.washington.edu 4-023 (66) Baker, Laura A. lbaker@USC.EDU 3-009 Barker, Edward D. t.barker@bbk.ac.uk 2-065 Baker, Majel R. mrbaker@usfca.edu 3-009 Barker, Erin T. Erin.Barker@Concorida.Ca 3-044 (11) Baker, Sandra A. sandrabaker80@gmail.com 2-005 (21) Barnes, Jaclyn Jaclyn.Barnes@cchmc.org 3-006 (84) Baldasaro, Ruth remath@live.unc.edu 2-003 Baldner, Conrad csbaldne@vt.edu 3-024 (76) Barnes, Matt Matt.arnes@nat.cen.ac.uk 2-064 Baams, Laura l.baams@uu.nl 3-008, 4-023 (83) Baaren, Rick V. r.vanbaaren@bsi.ru.nl 2-054 Baay, Pieter p.e.baay@uu.nl 2-022, 3-065 Babcock, Ben babco062@umn.edu 2-075 Bacelli, Joanna M. joanna.bacelli@gmail.com 4-047 Bachman, Heather hbachman@pitt.edu 2-011 Bacon, Sarah sbacon@cdc.gov 2-006 (G1), 2-072, 2-072, 3-042, 3-057 Badaly, Daryaneh badaly@usc.edu 3-051 (41), 4-005 (41) Baer, John jsbaer@u.washington.edu 2-009 Baezconde-Garbanati, Lourdes baezcond@usc.edu 2-051 Baghramian, Artin artin.baghramian.115@my.csun.edu 2-024 (45) Bagley, Erika J. ejbagley@auburn.edu 3-006 (38), 3-024 (38) Baldwin, Debora dbaldwin@utk.edu 2-067, 3-006 (70), 3-051 (57) Ball, Courtney cball@psych.rochester.edu 2-018 Ballard, Mary E. ballardm@pm.appstate.edu 4-005 (35) Bamaca-Colbert, Mayra Y. myb12@psu.edu 2-005 (46), 2-060 (56), 3-051 (30) Bamberg, Michael mbamberg@clarku.edu 2-037, 4-036 123 Barnett, Rosemary rbarnet@ufl.edu 4-058 (2) Barnett, Sarah Beth hun8@cdc.gov 2-072 Baroni, Elizabeth M. elizabeth.baroni@umit.maine.edu 2-042 (31), 3-006 (47), 4-005 (44) Barr, Alicia abarr@southplainscollege.edu 2-005 (45) Barr, Hailey Q. haileyqbarr@gmail.com 2-060 (43) Barr, Tamuz tamuzbarr@gmail.com 2-074 Barrieau, Lindsey E. lindseybarrieau@hotmail.com 2-042 (41), 3-006 (71), 4-023 (12) Baykey, Amy amy.baykey@kwantlen.net 2-024 (33) Beneteau, Jennifer jba50@sfu.ca 2-060 (77), 4-023 (75) Barry, Carolyn cbarry@loyola.edu 3-044 (44) Beal, Sarah sarahjbeal@gmail.com 3-006 (64), 4-041 (79) Bengston, Loren lbengsto@uwyo.edu 3-024 (55), 3-044 (55), 3-051 (55) Bartell, Stephanie stephanie.bartell@bc.edu 3-006 (48) Beauchamp, Miriam H. miriam.beauchamp@umontreal.ca 2-060 (2) Benjamin, Beth C. beth@mayan.org 3-006 (26) Barth, Joan M. jbarth@bama.ua.edu 2-024 (19) Beaumont, Sherry beaumont@unbc.ca 3-024 (79) Benner, Aprile abenner@prc.utexas.edu 4-062, 4-062 Bartkiewicz, Mark mbartkiewicz@glsen.org 4-052, 4-052 Bechtold, Jordan jbechtol@uci.edu 4-065 Bennett, Diana diana.bennett@psych.utah.edu 4-041 (70) Bartolo, Tania tba17@sfu.ca 3-051 (68) Becker, Stephen P. beckersp@muohio.edu 4-041 (70) Benson, Janel jbenson@colgate.edu 4-023 (59) Barton, Erica ebarton@uwyo.edu 3-024 (55), 3-044 (55), 3-051 (55) Beckert, Troy E. troy.beckert@usu.edu 3-006 (83), 4-023 (30) Bartoszuk, Karin bartoszu@etsu.edu 3-051 (78) Beckmeyer, Jonathon J. jjbvf2@mail.mizzou.edu 4-058 (8) Bedrouni, Samir L. sbedrouni@ucsc.edu 4-058 (84) Benson, Lizbeth lbens@psych.upenn.edu 4-024 Benson, Mark J. mbenson8@gmail.com 3-006 (20), 3-051 (72) Bascoe, Sonnette M. sbascoe@psych.rochester.edu 2-024 (6) Basilio, Camille D. Camille.Basilio@asu.edu 2-024 (27) Bentall, Richard P. richard.bentall@bangor.ac.uk 4-047 Beek, Titia titiabeek@gmail.com 4-023 (83) Berardi, Luciano lberardi@depaul.edu 4-008 Bassett Greer, Kelly kmbnn6@mail.missouri.edu 2-005 (14) Behen, Michael mbehen@pet.wayne.edu 3-051 (19) Berger, Christian cberger@uc.cl 4-041 (47), 4-072 Batanova, Milena D. mbatanova@gmail.com 4-012, 4-012, 4-023 (41) Behnke, Andrew O. andrew_behnke@ncsu.edu 2-024 (45), 4-058 (25) Bergeron, Nicholas R. bb8133@wayne.edu 4-023 (4) Bates, Justin R. justin.bates@cchmc.org 4-005 (38) Bell, Debora belldeb@missouri.edu 3-051 (77) Bergman, Lars R. lrb@psychology.su.se 3-044 (46) Baucom, Brian R. baucom@usc.edu 2-024 (64), 2-060 (65), 4-058 (44) Bellmore, Amy abellmore@wisc.edu 3-006 (41), 3-006 (42), 4-017 Bergstrom, Stephanie sbergstr@poets.whittier.edu 3-051 (46) Bauer, Daniel dbauer@email.unc.edu 2-003 Belsky, Jay jbelsky@ucdavis.edu 3-051 (13) Berkel, Cady Cady.Berkel@asu.edu 2-071, 2-077 Bavarian, Niloofar bavarian@onid.orst.edu 2-053 Bender, Rachel E. rachel.bender@temple.edu 3-067, 4-047 Berman, Steven L. sberman@ucf.edu 3-044 (84), 4-005 (79) Bay-Cheng, Laina Y. lb35@buffalo.edu 3-049, 3-049, 3-049 Bendezu, Jason jason.bendezu@gmail.com 3-051 (12) Bernal, Guillermo gbernal@ipsi.uprrp.edu 3-045 124 Berry, Tiffany tiffany.berry@cgu.edu 3-051 (66) Biondic, Daniella daniella.biondic@utoronto.ca 2-024 (31) Betancourt, Laura BETANCOURTL@email.chop.edu 2-005 (40) Birkett, Michelle birkett@northwestern.edu 3-011 Bett, Abigael abchero@yahoo.com 2-042 (26) Bishop, Erin ebishop@brandeis.edu 2-042 (68) Bettencourt, Amie abettenc@jhsph.edu 4-017, 4-017 Bishop, Nicholas S. nbishop8@utk.edu 3-059, 4-041 (45), 4-041 (65) Bevans, Katherine B. BEVANS@email.chop.edu 4-024 Bissell-Havran, Joanna jmb680@psu.edu 2-005 (22) Bisson, Elise biss7140@mylaurier.ca 3-038, 3-038 Beyers, Wim wim.beyers@ugent.be 2-024 (70), 3-005, 4-013, 4-070 Bezdjian, Serena bezdjian@USC.EDU 3-009 Black, Chelsea L. chelsea.black@temple.edu 4-047 Bhatia, Vickie vickiebhatia@gmail.com 2-024 (61), 4-041 (58) Black, Shimrit shimrit.black@temple.edu 3-067 Bhatt, Gira gira.bhatt@kwantlen.ca 4-058 (20) Blades, Mark m.blades@shef.ac.uk 4-041 (34) Bhindarwala, Asma M. asmab@bu.edu 4-023 (65) Blain-Arcaro, Christine christine.blain-arcaro@uottawa.ca 2-002, 2-024 (42) Bialeschki, M. Deborah dbialeschki@acacamps.org 3-046 Blair, Bethany L. blblair56@gmail.com 3-024 (83), 3-044 (83) Bianco, Hannah hbianco@du.edu 2-004 Blake, Ronette ronette.blake@gmail.com 3-024 (58) Bierman, Karen kb2@psu.edu 4-004, 4-066 Blakemore, Sarah-Jayne sj.blakemore@gmail.com 3-023 Bies, Miles mbies@uoguelph.ca 4-023 (8) Blankson, A. Nayena ablanks1@spelman.edu 4-058 (4) Big Crow, Cecelia cecelia.bigcrow@ucdenver.edu 2-015 Blodgett Salafia, Elizabeth H. elizabeth.salafia@ndsu.edu 2-005 (35), 2-024 (35), 4-041 (7) Bihm, Ernest ernestb@americaspromise.org 2-039 Blomfield, Corey J. [mailto:C.Blomfield@murdoch.edu.au 4-065 Bingenheimer, Jeffrey B. bartbing@gwu.edu 2-060 (9) Bloss, Kayley E. Z1594392@students.niu.edu 2-005 (50) 125 Blum, Robert W. rblum@jhsph.edu 3-045 Blunck, Amy T. amytrevethan@weber.edu 4-005 (39), 4-023 (2) Blöte, Anke W. blote@fsw.leidenuniv.nl 2-016 Bobo, Morgan bobox004@umn.edu 2-024 (5) Boccia, Angelo S. angelo.boccia@temple.edu 4-047 Bock, Tonia tsbock@stthomas.edu 2-060 (74), 3-015 Bodurtha, Joann jbodurtha@mcvh-vcu.edu 2-024 (9) Boelter, Jill jillboelter@mail.utexas.edu 3-051 (53), 4-058 (77) Bohnert, Amy abohner@luc.edu 2-024 (18), 2-050 Boislard, Marie-Aude boislard-pepin.marie-aude@uqam.ca 4-041 (37), 4-070, 4-070 Boivin, Michel michel.boivin@psy.ulaval.ca 4-039 Bokhorst, Caroline L. bokhorst@fsw.leidenuniv.nl 2-016 Bolland, John jbolland@ches.ua.edu 3-011, 4-028, 4-028, 4-028 Bonanno, Rina A. bonannor@dowling.edu 4-058 (47) Bonci, Alina boncalin@isu.edu 3-024 (2) Bond, David K. david.bond@cgu.edu 3-051 (7) Bonevski, Dimitar dbonevski@yahoo.com 2-005 (49) Bountress, Kaitlin kbountre@asu.edu 3-051 (6) Boom, Jan J.Boom@uu.nl 2-042 (76), 3-037 Bourne, Stacia stacia.bourne@psych.utah.edu 2-042 (74) Borden, Lynne bordenl@ag.arizona.edu 4-055 Bovis, Stephanie sbovis@purdue.edu 2-060 (55) Bower, Alicia A. aabower@unomaha.edu 3-006 (43) Borden, Lynne M. bordenl@email.arizona.edu 2-068, 2-068 Borduin, Charles M. CBorduin@missouri.edu 2-042 (9) Borelli, Jessica L. jessica.borelli@pomona.edu 3-051 (7) Borgen, Charles S. charlesborgen@gmail.com 2-060 (44) Bornovalova, Marina A. bornovalova@usf.edu 4-066 Bornstein, Marc H. Marc_H_Bornstein@nih.gov 2-024 (57), 3-006 (16), 3-044 (11) Borofsky, Larissa A. borofsky@usc.edu 2-024 (72), 4-005 (19), 4-058 (44) Borrero, Noah neborrero@usfca.edu 3-062 Borsato, Graciela gborsato@stanford.edu 3-062, 3-062 Bos, Henny M. h.m.w.bos@uva.nl 4-023 (83) Bosacki, Sandra sandra.bosacki@brocku.ca 2-031 Bosler, Cara cara.bosler@okstate.edu 4-005 (71), 4-058 (74) Boulton, Aaron aboulton@ku.edu 3-064 Bower, Andrew R. andbower@ucdavis.edu 2-005 (53) Bowers, Edmond ed.bowers@tufts.edu 3-024 (13), 4-049 Bowker, Anne abowker@carleton.ca 3-006 (23), 4-005 (17) Bowker, Julie jcbowker@buffalo.edu 2-057 Boyce, Cheryl cboyce@mail.nih.gov 2-006 (G6), 3-003, 3-011, 3-042, 3047, 3-057 Boyd, Michelle J. Michelle.Boyd@tufts.edu 4-023 (38) Boyko, Lisa M. lisa.m.boyko@gmail.com 3-006 (53), 3-044 (53) Bracamonte Wiggs, Christine cbmonte@email.arizona.edu 2-068, 4-055 Bradley, Robert robert.bradley@asu.edu 4-058 (17) Bradshaw, Catherine P. cbradsha@jhsph.edu 3-044 (42), 4-017 Brady, Anne E. aebrady@uvm.edu 4-058 (6) Bramadat, Paul bramadat@uvic.ca 3-040 126 Branje, Susan s.branje@uu.nl 2-016, 2-024 (73), 2-042 (14), 2-042 (50), 2-042 (58), 3-044 (49), 3-051 (74), 4-005 (75), 4-012, 4-030, 4-030 Brasfield, Hope hope.brasfield@gmail.com 4-041 (45), 4-041 (65) Brassard, Marla R. mrb29@columbia.edu 3-024 (51), 4-058 (53) Bravo, Diamond Y. dybravo@asu.edu 3-024 (21), 4-023 (9) Bravo, Magali mbravo@education.ucsb.edu 3-051 (56), 4-023 (13) Bravo, Valeriya vbravo@yorku.ca 3-024 (65) Breen, Andrea abreen@uoguelph.ca 2-005 (80), 4-058 (82) Bregman, Hallie R. halliebregman@gmail.com 2-052, 2-052, 2-052, 3-044 (82), 4-023 (82), 4-044 Breivik, Kyrre Kyrre.Breivik@uni.no 3-006 (31) Brendgen, Mara Brendgen.Mara@uqam.ca 2-065, 4-039, 4-039, 4-041 (37) Brenick, Alaina abrenick@gmail.com 4-061, 4-061 Brennan, Stephanie brennan.stephaniel@gmail.com 4-023 (52) Brensilver, Matthew MBrensilver@mednet.ucla.edu 2-048 Breslau, Joshua jabreslau@gmail.com 4-041 (56) Bride, Daniel L. danielbride86@gmail.com 2-024 (1), 4-003 Briley, Daniel daniel.briley@mail.utexas.edu 2-042 (19) Brinkworth, Maureen mlb710@mail.harvard.edu 3-044 (57) Britner, Preston A. Preston.Britner@UConn.edu 2-027, 3-006 (67) Brown, Joshua cjobrown@fordham.edu 2-038, 2-053 Brown, Sandra A. sandrabrown@ucsd.edu 2-005 (32) Bukowski, William william.bukowski@concordia.ca 2-005 (52), 2-005 (72), 2-057, 2-075, 3-043, 3-044 (43), 3-051 (58), 4-023 (27), 4-023 (68), 4-023 (79), 4-039, 4045, 4-054 Bulat, Amanda aebulat@gmail.com 2-024 (35) Brittain, Heather brittah@mcmaster.ca 2-002, 3-022, 3-022, 3-044 (41), 4-005 (61) Browne, Dillon T. dillon.browne@utoronto.ca 2-024 (31) Brittian, Aerika aerika.brittian@asu.edu 2-024 (28), 3-025.5, 3-025.5 Brule, Heather A. brule@pdx.edu 3-006 (21) Brockman, Callie cjbrockman@wichita.edu 4-058 (61) Bryan, Derrick M. dbryan@as.ua.edu 4-028 Brodersen, Etta etta_brodersen@sfu.ca 4-023 (75) Buchanan, Carie M. carie.buchanan@usask.ca 2-042 (42) Brodish, Amanda abrodish@isr.umich.edu 3-044 (29) Buchanan, Christy M. buchanan@wfu.edu 2-005 (25), 2-042 (13), 3-024 (8) Brodsky, Nancy BRODSKYN@email.chop.edu 2-005 (40) Buchmann, Marlis buchmann@jacobcenter.uzh.ch 2-024 (76), 2-033 Burnette, Mandi mandi.burnette@rochester.edu 2-005 (73), 2-024 (69), 3-006 (40), 3051 (10), 4-023 (61) Bronk, Kendall C. kcbronk@bsu.edu 3-039, 3-054, 4-068 Buck, Katharine A. katharineann.buck@gmail.com 2-005 (48) Burns, April aprilburns72@gmail.com 3-049 Brook, Judith S. judith.brook@nyumc.org 4-023 (39), 4-023 (81) Buckhalt, Joseph buckhja@auburn.edu 3-044 (38) Burns, Rachel rachel_burns@rand.org 4-055 Brooks, Jeff Brooks.52@nd.edu 3-015, 4-037 Buckley, Lisa ld.buckley@qut.edu.au 4-023 (67) Burpee, Alisa burpea@spu.edu 3-006 (33) Brooks-Gunn, Jeanne jb224@columbia.edu 2-005 (10), 2-005 (11), 2-060 (1), 3026 Budescu, Mia tua89634@temple.edu 2-042 (6), 3-044 (10) Burris, Antoinette antoinette.burris@dm.duke.edu 3-006 (12) Buehler, Cheryl cabuehle@uncg.edu 2-005 (57) Burrow, Anthony L. alb325@cornell.edu 3-039, 4-048 Buhrmester, Duane chow@utdallas.edu 2-042 (46), 4-058 (72) Burt, Keith B. Keith.Burt@uvm.edu 4-058 (66) Buist, Kirsten K.L.Buist@uu.nl 2-042 (14) Burton, Chad burtoncm@upmc.edu 2-023, 4-041 (82) Brown, B. B. bbbrown@wisc.edu 3-024 (84), 4-005 (83), 4-041 (46), 4041 (54) Brown, Charity L. browncl9@email.sc.edu 2-059, 4-005 (20) Brown, Christia S. christia.brown@uky.edu 3-044 (27), 4-005 (25), 4-032 Brown, Jill jillbrown@creighton.edu 4-041 (14) Burdzovic Andreas, Jasmina jba@brown.edu 3-024 (41) Burk, Linnea burk@wisc.edu 2-042 (73), 2-067, 2-067 Burk, William J. W.Burk@psych.ru.nl 2-024 (51), 2-046, 3-036, 3-063, 4-005 (32), 4-063, 4-072 Burnett, Stephanie burstephanie@gmail.com 3-023 Burwell, Rebecca A. rburwell@westfield.ma.edu 3-006 (79), 4-005 (73) 127 Busby, Danielle R. drbusby@gmail.com 3-044 (19) Calzo, Jerel P. jerel.calzo@childrens.harvard.edu 2-023, 3-032 Cardemil, Esteban ECardemil@Clarku.edu 2-020, 3-028, 3-044 (71) Bush, Nicole BushN@som.ucsf.edu 2-028 Cameron, Catherine Ann acameron@psych.ubc.ca 3-006 (74) Cardwell, Stephanie steph88@uab.edu 4-023 (33) Bush-Richards, Angela angelabush.richards@gmail.com 3-051 (2) Campbell, Andrew J. ajcampbe@gwmail.gwu.edu 3-024 (14) Carey, Devin C. dcarey2@luc.edu 2-024 (15), 3-003 Busseri, Michael A. mbusseri@brocku.ca 2-005 (18) Campbell, Caitlin P. camp3120@pacificu.edu 2-005 (58) Carey, Kate B. Kate_Carey@brown.edu 3-032 Bussey, Kay kay.bussey@mq.edu.au 3-006 (13), 3-051 (32), 3-051 (42), 4019, 4-019, 4-019, 4-050 Campbell, Charlie (Carroll) campbell.601@osu.edu 4-058 (73) Carey, Michael P. mike.carey@me.com 3-032 Campbell, Susan B. sbcamp@pitt.edu 4-065 Carlo, Gustavo carlog@missouri.edu 2-005 (54), 2-005 (84), 2-018, 2-018, 2-024 (28), 2-033, 2-060 (54), 4-012, 4-012, 4-041 (14) Byck, Gayle g-byck@northwestern.edu 3-011 Byers, E. Sandra byers@unb.ca 2-005 (6), 3-044 (12) Byrd, Christy M. cmbyrd@umich.edu 2-010 Byrne, Michelle mbyrne@unimelb.edu.au 2-012 Cadely, Hans S. hzs0009@tigermail.auburn.edu 4-041 (66) Caldeira, Kimberly M. caldeira@umd.edu 4-041 (32) Caldwell, Cleopatra H. cleoc@umich.edu 2-060 (11) Caldwell, Linda lindac@psu.edu 4-007 Calhoun, Casey D. cdcalhou@email.unc.edu 4-039 Campione-Barr, Nicole campionebarrn@missouri.edu 2-005 (14) Campos, Joseph jcampos@berkeley.edu 2-042 (49) Camras, Linda lcamras@depaul.edu 2-024 (41), 3-031 Cance, Jessica D. jdcance@mail.utexas.edu 2-042 (35), 2-060 (83), 4-012 Cantarero, Rodrigo rfc@unlserve.unl.edu 4-041 (14) Caouette, Justin D. jdcaouette@ucdavis.edu 2-030, 2-042 (1), 3-051 (49) Capaldi, Deborah M. deborahc@oslc.org 3-006 (45), 4-004 Caravita, Simona C. simona.caravita@unicatt.it 3-027, 3-027 Card, Noel A. ncard@email.arizona.edu 2-042 (39), 2-060 (47), 2-060 (68), 3006 (69) 128 Carlson, Corissa carlson.corissa@gmail.com 2-061 Carmago, Gina L. ginacamargo@gmail.com 4-023 (27) Carothers, Kristin J. kcarothe@depaul.edu 2-028 Carr, Staci E. secarr@vcu.edu 4-005 (26) Carrano, Jennifer L. carranoj@bc.edu 2-011, 2-011, 4-005 (33) Carter, Jocelyn jcarter9@depaul.edu 2-020, 2-028 Casarjian, Bethany bcasarjian@msn.com 3-044 (4) Casarjian, Robin robin@lionheart.org 3-044 (4) Casas, Juan F. jcasas@unomaha.edu 3-006 (43) Casazza, Krista kristac@uab.edu 2-043 Chamberland, Line chamberland.line@uqam.ca 4-021 Chapman, Erin N. chapman@uidaho.edu 2-005 (83) Casper, Deborah M. dcasper@email.arizona.edu 2-060 (47), 2-060 (68), 3-006 (69) Chambers, Carissa L. carissa.chambers@gmail.com 3-048 Chapman, Rebekah rl.chapman@qut.edu.au 4-023 (67) Cassidy, Jude jcassidy@umd.edu 2-055, 4-031 Chan, Christian S. christian.chan@umb.edu 4-067, 4-067, 4-067 Charlesworth-Attie, Sarah sec23@uw.edu 4-041 (59) Castaneda, Claudia L. claudialcastaneda@yahoo.com 2-005 (82), 3-044 (48), 4-041 (57) Chan, Hsun-yu hchan9@wisc.edu 4-041 (46) Chassin, Laurie laurie.chassin@asu.edu 2-009, 3-043, 3-051 (6) Castelhano, Monica monica.castelhano@queensu.ca 2-014 Chan, Meanne mchan@psych.ubc.ca 2-043 Chatman-Nelson, Celina celinacn@uic.edu 4-033 Castellanos Ryan, Natalie natalie.castellanos.ryan@umontreal.ca 3-006 (39), 3-044 (1), 4-016 Chan, Melissa mchizzle28@gmail.com 3-006 (80) Chavez, Ricardo rchavez01@gmail.com 2-042 (34) Castillo, Elizabeth es10@nova.edu 2-042 (75) Chan, Sherilynn sherilynnchan@gmail.com 2-005 (44), 2-024 (43), 2-042 (43) Chavira, Gabriela gabriela.chavira@csun.edu 3-006 (19), 3-024 (19), 3-024 (21), 4041 (18) Catalano, Richard F. catalano@uw.edu 2-005 (61), 2-039, 2-067, 3-032 Chance, Lauren ljchance@uvic.ca 2-005 (27) Catherine, Nicole L. ncatheri@sfu.ca 4-005 (56) Chandler, Michael chandler@interchange.ubc.ca 2-058, 2-058 Cauffman, Elizabeth cauffman@uci.edu 2-009, 2-009, 2-009, 4-065, 4-065 Chandley, Rachel B. burgarrl@muohio.edu 3-051 (77) Caughy, Margaret O. Margaret.Caughy@UTSouthwestern.edu 3-030 Chandra, Anita chandra@rand.org 4-055 Cavanagh, Shannon scavanagh@austin.utexas.edu 2-011 Chang, Tzufen tzufen.chang@gmail.com 2-005 (29) Cavanaugh, Alyson M. amcavana@uncg.edu 2-005 (57) Chango, Joanna chango@virginia.edu 2-042 (55), 2-042 (56), 3-013, 3-013, 3-024 (75), 3-041, 3-067, 4-005 (49), 4-041 (71) Caverly, Sarah L. sarah.caverly@sedl.org 4-058 (77) Cebioglu, Senay senaycebi@gmail.com 4-023 (42) Chadwick, Erica D. Erica.Chadwick@vuw.ac.nz 2-049 Chavous, Tabbye tchavous@umich.edu 2-010, 2-010 Chao, Ruth K. ruth.chao@ucr.edu 4-011 Chaparro, Maria P. maria.chaparro@utoronto.ca 2-024 (76), 4-005 (11) Chaplin, Tara tara.chaplin@yale.edu 4-073, 4-073 129 Cheadle, Jacob j.e.cheadle@gmail.com 4-014 Cheah, Charissa ccheah@umbc.edu 2-042 (5), 3-044 (47) Cheema, Ravreet K. ravreet.cheema.20@my.csun.edu 2-005 (82), 3-044 (48), 4-041 (57) Chein, Jason jchein@temple.edu 3-063 Chemers, Martin M. mchemers@ucsc.edu 2-005 (23) Chen, Chuansheng cschen@uci.edu 2-005 (28) Chen, Edith echen@psych.ubc.ca 2-043 Chen, Eric echen017@ucr.edu 2-060 (69) Chen, Hongyu rabbit--chen@163.com 2-024 (3), 2-042 (3) Chiodo, Lisa M. lchiodo@med.wayne.edu 2-003 Ciarrochi, Joseph joec@uow.edu.au 4-058 (80) Chen, Kun-Hu d90227003@ntu.edu.tw 2-042 (80) Chipman, Jane jchipman@interchange.ubc.ca 2-060 (7) Cicchetti, Dante cicchett@umn.edu 2-005 (76), 3-051 (4), 3-067, 3-067 Chen, Pan pchen2@yoda.bsd.uchicago.edu 2-005 (15), 4-058 (37) Chisolm, Deena J. deena.chisolm@nationwidechildrens.org 4-041 (82) Cillessen, Antonius H. a.cillessen@psych.ru.nl 2-014, 2-075, 3-024 (46), 3-036, 3-036, 3-044 (43), 4-005 (50) Chen, Wei-Ting wchen76@wisc.edu 3-006 (41) Choe, Daniel E. danieewo@umich.edu 2-005 (9), 3-003, 4-005 (59) Chen, Xinyin xinyin@gse.upenn.edu 3-006 (53), 3-043, 3-044 (53), 4-031, 4-041 (77) Choi, David Y. davidchoi@fuller.edu 4-005 (13) Chen, Yufei yifuc@uga.edu 2-071 Cheney, Brianna cheneybr@bc.edu 2-042 (37) Cheng, Ching-Ling clcheng@ntnu.edu.tw 3-024 (68), 4-041 (41) Cheng, Shan chengshanhb@163.com 2-005 (62), 3-006 (58), 4-023 (63) Cheong, JeeWon jcheong@pitt.edu 2-023, 2-023, 2-060 (40) Cheshire, Emily ECheshire@vt.edu 4-005 (36) Cheung, Cecilia scheung3@illinois.edu 4-005 (7) Cheung, Rebecca Y. M. ycheung@nd.edu 2-042 (8) Chiao, Joan jchiao@northwestern.edu 1-004 Chieh, Kai Men km.chieh@gmail.com 3-006 (74) Chien, Dorothy dorothy.chien.415@my.csun.edu 4-058 (25) Choi, James Y. jimmy.choi@binghamton.edu 4-047 Chong, Wan Har wanhar.chong@nie.edu.sg 4-064, 4-064, 4-064 Chou, Catherine P. catherine.chou@email.ucr.edu 2-042 (65), 4-041 (2) Choukas-Bradley, Sophia C. sccb@email.unc.edu 3-036 Chow, Chong-Man chowc@uwosh.edu 2-042 (46), 4-058 (72) Chow, Kirby A. kirbychow@ucla.edu 4-058 (83) Christoph, Gabriela gabriela.christoph@uni-wuerzburg.de 2-024 (17), 3-037 Chronister, Krista kmg@uoregon.edu 2-042 (21) Chu, Hui Huichu07@gmail.com 3-044 (27) Chuang, Susan schuang@uoguelph.ca 2-005 (13), 3-044 (30), 4-023 (8) Chye, Stefanie Y. stefanie.chye@nie.edu.sg 4-064 130 Cisse, Cathleen cathleencisse@gmail.com 3-044 (4) Clark, Gregory S. gclarkjr@aum.edu 4-058 (43) Clarke, Thomas J. tjclarke@email.arizona.edu 4-052 Cleland, Charles ccleland@optonline.net 4-005 (4) Clemans, Katherine H. kclemans@jhsph.edu 4-017 Cleveland, H. Harrington hhc10@psu.edu 3-044 (33) Coddington, Cassandra S. ccoddington@ches.ua.edu 4-028 Coffey, John K. jkcoffey2@gmail.com 3-051 (7) Cogburn, Courtney ccogburn@umich.edu 2-062, 3-044 (29) Cohen, Geoffrey L. glc@stanford.edu 3-036 Cohen-Carmeli, Maya babelula@gmail.com 2-046 Cohen-Malayev, Maya cohen-malayev.maya@biu.ac.il 4-041 (80) Coie, John john.coie@mail01.adm.duke.edu 4-004 Connell, Arin arin.connell@case.edu 4-023 (49) Cornejo, Louis A. bekone@mail.sfsu.edu 3-051 (40) Coirazza, Joleen jol24_7@hotmail.com 4-023 (12) Connell, Jessica jhc5007@gmail.com 4-005 (84) Cornelius, Marie D. mdc1@pitt.edu 2-017 Colalillo, Sara sara.colalillo@mail.mcgill.ca 4-016 Conners-Burrow, Nicola BurrowNA@uams.edu 4-058 (7), 4-058 (17) Corona, Rosalie racorona@vcu.edu 2-024 (9), 2-024 (38), 2-060 (35), 4-005 (31) Colder, Craig R. ccolder@buffalo.edu 2-005 (31), 2-028, 2-060 (32), 3-006 (73), 3-006 (75), 3-024 (32), 3-024 (33), 3-044 (58), 4-023 (51) Connolly, Jennifer connolly@yorku.ca 2-024 (55), 2-046, 2-046, 3-024 (65), 3-041, 4-023 (44), 4-041 (11), 4-053 Corprew, Charles S. ccorprew@loyno.edu 4-058 (81) Connors, Laura lconnors@yorku.ca 3-051 (59) Corpus, Jennifer H. henderlj@reed.edu 2-005 (17) Conrod, Patricia patricia.conrod@kcl.ac.uk 4-016, 4-016, 4-016, 4-016 Corral, Lidia lidia.corral.91@my.csun.edu 2-042 (11) Cook, Emily C. emily.cook@yale.edu 4-073 Correia, João jcorreia@ispa.pt 2-060 (70) Cookston, Jeffrey cookston@sfsu.edu 2-024 (11), 2-041 Costigan, Catherine costigan@uvic.ca 2-005 (27), 2-056, 3-044 (81) Cooley, Shelby scooley1@umd.edu 3-007, 3-044 (74), 4-058 (54) Cox, Jacqueline jacquelinecox@gmail.com 4-007 Cooley, Shelby shelby.cooley@gmail.com 3-051 (3) Cox, Martha C. martha_cox@unc.ed 3-006 (38), 3-024 (38) Cooper, Catherine ccooper@ucsc.edu 3-006 (8) Cox, Ronald r.cox@okstate.edu 3-006 (27), 4-041 (23) Cooper, Marty A. marty.cooper@student.shu.edu 2-060 (82) Coyne, Sarah M. smcoyne@byu.edu 4-023 (84), 4-027 Cooper, Shauna M. smcooper@sc.edu 2-059, 4-005 (20) Craig, Wendy M. Wendy.craig@queensu.ca 2-005 (42), 2-014, 2-024 (44), 2-042 (71), 3-044 (70) Coley, John D. j.coley@neu.edu 2-060 (3), 3-024 (3) Collibee, Charlene Charlene.collibee@gmail.com 2-005 (56), 4-058 (49) Collins, Linda lmcollins@psu.edu 2-055, 3-044 (7) Collins, Rebecca collins@rand.org 3-008 Collins, W. Andrew wcollins@umn.edu 2-005 (70), 2-024 (5), 3-044 (56), 4-058 (58) Compas, Bruce E. bruce.compas@vanderbilt.edu 2-004, 3-051 (62) Conger, Katherine kjconger@ucdavis.edu 4-041 (56), 4-071 Conger, Rand D. rdconger@ucdavis.edu 3-006 (62), 4-038, 4-038, 4-038, 4-038 Conley, Colleen cconley@luc.edu 2-060 (60), 3-026 Conn, Michael mconn@girlscouts.org 3-046 Connell, Arin M. amc76@case.edu 3-068 Cordero, Annel annel_pastel@hotmail.com 4-005 (55) Corley, Summar corleysc@uga.edu 4-004 Corliss, Heather heather.corliss@childrens.harvard.edu 2-023 131 Cramer, Christine M. cmcramer@gmail.com 4-027 Crawford, Michael crawfordjmichael@gmail.com 3-019, 3-019 Creedon, Kate kcreedon@uvic.ca 4-058 (67) Cui, Lixian lixian.cui@okstate.edu 4-005 (71), 4-058 (74) Damon, William wdamon@stanford.edu 2-021, 3-054, 4-025 Creemers, Hanneke h.e.creemers@uva.nl 4-042 Cullen, Kathryn rega0026@umn.edu 4-073 Dang, Michelle dangmt@aol.com 4-041 (56) Cressen, Jessica M. Jmc836@nyu.edu 3-016 Culpepper, Christi L. cculpep3@utk.edu 3-006 (70), 3-051 (57), 4-041 (45), 2067, 3-059 Daniels, Elizabeth daniels.psychology@gmail.com 2-060 (84) Crick, Nicki crick001@umn.edu 2-005 (76), 2-060 (45), 2-075, 4-005 (77), 4-054 Cummings, E. M. Edward.M.Cummings.10@nd.edu 2-024 (6), 2-042 (8) Criss, Michael michael.criss@okstate.edu 4-005 (71), 4-058 (74) Cumsille, Patricio pcumsill@uc.cl 3-005, 4-002, 4-033 Crockett, Lisa J. ecrockett1@unl.edu 2-017, 2-060 (37), 4-041 (79) Cunningham, Lesley lesley.cunningham@hwdsb.on.ca 2-024 (42) Cromer, Kelly D. kdcromer@mail.usf.edu 4-058 (43) Cunningham, Michael mcunnin1@tulane.edu 4-058 (35) Crone, Eveline ECrone@FSW.leidenuniv.nl 2-060 (76), 3-023 Curran, Patrick J. curran@unc.edu 2-003 Crosnoe, Rob crosnoe@austin.utexas.edu 2-029, 3-051 (63), 4-049.5 Cushman, Kristen kristen.cushman686@topper.wku.edu 3-033 Cross, Cassandra cassandracross@ou.edu 4-005 (45) Cuttini, Laura laura.cuttini@mail.mcgill.ca 4-005 (52), 4-023 (77) Crowell, Sheila sheila.crowell@psych.utah.edu 2-024 (1), 4-003, 4-003 Cyr, Betty-Ann betty@knights.ucf.edu 3-044 (84) Crowell, Susanna susanna.j.crowell@gmail.com 3-051 (62) Czarlinski, Jennifer j.czarlinski@hotmail.com 2-034 Cruz, Maria Elena astteam@aol.com 4-023 (31) D'Amico, Elizabeth J. Elizabeth_DAmico@rand.org 3-058 Crystal, Sarah I. scrystal@spu.edu 2-036, 2-042 (84), 3-034, 4-023 (58) Da Cunha, Josafá M. josafas@gmail.com 3-044 (5), 3-061 Cue, Erin erin.n.cue@gmail.com 4-018 Dahl, Ronald rondahl@berkeley.edu 2-030, 3-024 (58), 4-007 Cuellar, Jessica jcuellar@email.unc.edu 4-023 (10) Dal Cin, Sonya sdalcin@umich.edu 2-054 132 Daniels, Tina tina_daniels@carleton.ca 3-024 (48) Danzi, Lauren E. ledanzi@gmail.com 3-048 Darazsdi, Jacquelyn jed2505@uncw.edu 4-010 Darling, Nancy Nancy.Darling@oberlin.edu 3-059, 4-050 Darlington, Erin darlingt@uoregon.edu 2-024 (13) Darwich, Lina lina.darwiche@gmail.com 3-024 (30), 3-034, 3-034 Dashora, Pushpanjali dashora.2@buckeyemail.osu.edu 2-060 (67) Dauber, Susan sdauber@spencer.org 2-006 (G9), 3-042 Daugherty, Julia jcd9000@uncw.edu 4-010 Daughters, Stacey daughter@umd.edu 2-055, 4-031 Davidson, Alice J. adavidson@rollins.edu 2-005 (58) Davies, Patrick T. patrick.davies@rochester.edu 2-024 (6) Davila, Joanne joanne.davila.phd@gmail.com 2-024 (61), 4-041 (58) Davis, Alexandra N. andm9d@mail.umkc.edu 2-033, 2-060 (54), 4-041 (14) de Groat, Cynthia L. degroatc@healthpsych.ucsf.edu 3-051 (35), 4-041 (55) Defoe, Ivy N. i.n.defoe@uu.nl 2-042 (14) Davis, Betsy betsy@ori.org 3-006 (59) de Guzman, Jacqueline deguzman@uoguelph.ca 2-024 (8) Degnan, Kathryn A. kdegnan@umd.edu 4-031, 4-031 Davis, Katherine A. kateyd@spu.edu 2-036 de Guzman, Maria Rosario T. mguzman2@unl.edu 3-024 (11), 4-041 (14) DeGue, Sarah hci2@cdc.gov 2-072 Davis, Katie kdavis78@gmail.com 2-042 (83) de Haan, Amaranta a.d.dehaan@uu.nl 2-060 (73) Dekovic, Maja M.Dekovic@uu.nl 2-005 (38), 2-060 (73), 3-006 (37) Davis, Katrina E. kdavis46@depaul.edu 2-020 de la Haye, Kayla delahaye@rand.org 3-058, 3-058, 4-034 Del Giudice, Marco marco.delgiudice@unito.it 3-052, 3-052 Davis, Miranda davima9@wfu.edu 4-041 (25) De Loney, E. Hill CPYD@aol.com 2-060 (11) Delaney-Black, Virginia vdelaney@.med.wayne.edu 2-003 Davis, Orlando landosharp@yahoo.com 4-046 De Los Reyes, Andres adlr@umd.edu 2-055, 2-055 DeLay, Dawn ddelay@fau.edu 2-060 (33), 3-024 (4), 3-044 (5), 3-051 (48), 4-014 Davis, Stephanie sdavis18@pitt.edu 3-024 (71) De Meyer, Stefanie rostette@hotmail.com 4-070 Davis Crump, Aria acrump@nida.nih.gov 2-006 (G6), 3-047 de Rooij, Mark J. rooijm@fsw.leidenuniv.nl 2-016 Davis-Kean, Pamela pdakean@umich.edu 2-003 De Ruyter, Doret J. d.j.de.ruijter@vu.nl 3-040 Dawes, Molly tuc13509@temple.edu 3-006 (44), 3-024 (52) De Sonneville, Leo LdeSonneville@fsw.leidenuniv.nl 3-006 (2) Dawes, Nickki P. nickki.dawes@umb.edu 2-068, 3-006 (17) de St. Aubin, Ed ed.destaubin@marquette.edu 3-038, 3-038 Day, Joseph jday5@uic.edu 2-053 de Waal, Frans dewaal@emory.edu 3-001 Day, Kathleen katymeg.day@gmail.com 3-024 (23) de Wied, Minet m.dewied@uu.nl 2-024 (73), 4-012, 4-041 (72) Day, Randal day@byu.edu 2-042 (54) Deardorff, Julianna jdeardorff@berkeley.edu 2-005 (2), 2-024 (2) De Genna, Natacha degennan@pitt.edu 2-017 Debnam, Katrina J. kdebnam@umd.edu 4-041 (83) 133 Delgado, Melissa md44@txstate.edu 3-006 (36), 3-051 (28) Dell'Aglio, Débora D. dalbosco@cpovo.net 2-024 (26), 2-060 (66) DeLong, Maggie delomm11@uwgb.edu 3-051 (54) Denault, Anne-Sophie anne-sophie.denault@usherbrooke.ca 2-005 (51), 3-019 Denney, Rebecca radenne@ilstu.edu 2-060 (75) Dennison, Meg megdennison@gmail.com 2-030, 3-006 (1) DePaolis, Kathryn kdku91@hotmail.com 3-064 Derlan, Chelsea L. cderlan@asu.edu 3-025.5, 4-041 (81) Dermody, Sarah sls124@pitt.edu 2-023 DeRose, Laura derose@adelphi.edu 2-024 (12) Dickson, Daniel A. ddickson1@luc.edu 2-060 (60) Dirks, Melanie A. melanie.dirks@mcgill.ca 4-005 (52), 4-023 (77) Des Rosiers, Sabrina E. srosiers@med.miami.edu 2-051 Dickson, Daniel J. ddickso1@fau.edu 2-060 (33), 3-051 (48) Dishion, Thomas J. dishion@uoregon.edu 2-025, 2-042 (12), 3-048, 3-051 (65), 4-014, 4-063 Desjardins, Tracy tdesjar@uvic.ca 3-006 (34) Diemer, Matthew diemerm@msu.edu 2-007 DesRoches, Andrea J. ad10jd@brocku.ca 3-024 (17) Dierkhising, Carly B. carly.dierkhising@gmail.com 2-024 (67), 4-023 (76) Detloff, Allison M. adetloff@gmail.com 2-005 (77) Diers, Judith jdiers@unicef.org 2-001 Deutsch, Aaron wdeutsch@gmu.edu 4-041 (40) Dieter, Patricia Patricia.dieter@umit.maine.edu 2-042 (31), 3-006 (47), 4-005 (44) Deutsch, Arielle R. aride.unl@gmail.com 2-005 (84), 2-017, 2-060 (37), 4-023 (70) Dietrich, Julia julia.dietrich@uni-erfurt.de 3-035 Deutsch, Nancy L. nld7a@virginia.edu 2-071, 3-004, 3-004, 3-013, 4-008, 4-046 Dhariwal, Amrit amritdhariwal@ymail.com 2-024 (55), 2-046 Dhokai, Gopi dhokai@bc.edu 4-041 (63) Di Pomponio, Ilena ileana.dipomponio@uniroma1.it 2-005 (47) Diamond, Guy DIAMONDG@email.chop.edu 3-021 Dias, Sandra I. sid214@nyu.edu 3-006 (30) Dickenson, Leah ldickenson@ucla.edu 3-029 Dickson, Daniel dadickson@gmail.com 2-024 (60) Dickson, Daniel danieljd824@gmail.com 3-024 (4), 3-044 (5) Dmitrieva, Julia jdmitrieva@psy.du.edu 2-024 (14) Do, Cindy cdo069@uottawa.ca 2-024 (42), 4-005 (61) do Ceu Taveira, Maria ceuta2@psi.uminho.pt 3-035 Dietrich, Mary S. mary.dietrich@vanderbilt.edu 4-058 (62) DiGiovanni, Craig cdd527@gmail.com 3-034 Doane Sampey, Leah Leah.Doane@asu.edu 2-043, 2-043 Dodd, Alyson L. a.dodd@lancaster.ac.uk 4-047 Dodge, Ken dodge@duke.edu 4-004 Doernte, Mareike mareikedoernte@gmx.de 2-042 (51) Dijkstra, Jan Kornelis jan.dijkstra@rug.nl 2-038, 2-038, 3-044 (51), 4-023 (50), 4-041 (47), 4-069, 4-072 Dogan, Aysun doganaysun@gmail.com 4-023 (42) Dillon, Colleen O. codillon@uw.edu 3-024 (64) Dolente, Lauren lauren.dolente@gmail.com 3-024 (30) DiLorenzo, Paul pdilorenzo@casey.org 2-066 Dollahite, David David_Dollahite@byu.edu 2-060 (78) Dimler, Mallory mldimler@suffolk.edu 2-060 (34) Dombrowski, Caitlin V. caitlin.dombrowski@uconn.edu 3-006 (49) Dion, Jacinthe jacinthe_dion@uqac.ca 4-041 (62) Domene, Jose F. jfdomene@unb.ca 4-023 (26), 4-058 (29) Dion, Robin rdion@mathematica-mpr.com 3-018 Domenech Rodriguez, Melanie melanie.domenech@usu.edu 3-028 Dirghangi, Shrija sdirghan@fau.edu 2-060 (33), 3-024 (4), 3-044 (5), 3-051 (48) Domoff, Sarah E. sdomoff@bgsu.edu 2-042 (15), 3-044 (34), 3-044 (40), 4-005 (70) 134 Donnellan, M. B. donnel59@msu.edu 4-038 Doyle, Alicia aliciadlynch@gmail.com 2-060 (15) Dumka, Larry larry.dumka@asu.edu 2-005 (55), 3-006 (7), 4-058 (23) Donnerstein, Ed edonners@u.arizona.edu 1-001 Doyle, Otima otima.doyle@duke.edu 3-006 (12) DuMont, Kimberly A. kdumont@wtgrantfdn.org 2-006 (G10), 3-042 Dooley, Julian j.dooley@ecu.edu.au 3-031 Drazdowski, Tess K. drazdowskitk@vcu.edu 2-042 (44) Dunifon, Rachel red26@cornell.edu 2-005 (12) Dooley, Stephen stephen.dooley@kwantlen.ca 4-058 (20) Driver, Persis persisd@gmail.com 2-005 (75) Dunlap, Eloise dunlap@ndri.org 4-041 (39) Doornwaard, Suzan M. s.m.doornwaard@uu.nl 2-042 (50) Drouin-Germain, Anne anne.drouin-germain@uqtr.ca 2-060 (2) Dunlop, William L. wdunlop2@interchange.ubc.ca 4-037 Doosje, Bertjan E.J.Doosje@uva.nl 3-040 Drummond, Holli holli.drummond@wku.edu 4-028 Duong, Jeffrey jduong@jhsph.edu 3-044 (42) Doramajian, Caroline cdoramajian@gmail.com 2-005 (52) Du, Guanghua dgh1988@163.com 4-058 (64) Dussault, Frederic fredericdussault@videotron.ca 4-041 (37) Dorn, Lorah D. lorah.dorn@cchmc.org 2-012, 3-006 (64), 4-005 (38), 4-023 (1) du Maine, Nicole nicoledumaine@gmail.com 4-028 Dweck, Carol dweck@stanford.edu 4-062 Dubas, Judith J.J.S.Dubas@uu.nl 2-042 (14) Dworkin, Jodi jdworkin@umn.edu 4-005 (84) Dost Gözkan, Ayfer ayfer.dost@bahcesehir.edu.tr 3-006 (9), 4-023 (6) DuBois, David dldubois@uic.edu 2-034, 2-034, 2-034, 2-053, 2-053, 2063, 3-046, 4-046 Dyches, Karmon D. karmon@ou.edu 3-024 (50) Dotterer, Aryn M. dotterer@purdue.edu 3-024 (9) Dubois, Marie-Eve mar_du@live.concordia.ca 2-005 (72), 3-051 (58) Doty, Jennifer doty.jen@gmail.com 4-005 (84) Duddy, Amber Amber@cypq.org 2-013, 3-044 (26) Doty, Nathan ndoty@partners.org 2-052 Duffy, Sophia sduff8@depaul.edu 2-034, 2-034, 2-053 Doughty, Susan E. susanedoughty@gmail.com 2-060 (14) Duku, Eric duku@mcmaster.ca 2-002, 3-022 Douglas, Kevin douglask@sfu.ca 4-023 (75), 4-058 (20) Dulin Keita, Akilah akilah@uab.edu 2-043 Doxie, Jacqueline jdoxie@depaul.edu 2-034 Dumais, Maggie maggie.dumais@uqac.ca 3-024 (77) Dorsey, Quay A. qad5000@gmail.com 4-041 (68) 135 Dyk, Patricia pdyk@uky.edu 4-005 (15) Dymnicki, Allison adymni2@uic.edu 3-011, 3-011 Dynes, Morgan mdynes@bgsu.edu 3-044 (40), 4-005 (70) Dzirasa, Erikka erikka.dzirasa@duke.edu 3-006 (12) Eastabrook, Jennifer 6jme2@queensu.ca 3-006 (72), 4-003, 4-003 Eccles, Jacquelynne jeccles@umich.edu 2-077, 3-044 (29), 3-044 (57) Elam, Kit K. ke56@le.ac.uk 3-009 Englund, Michelle M. englu008@umn.edu 2-042 (32), 2-074 Echols, Leslie leslie.echols@ucla.edu 3-024 (53), 4-023 (48), 4-041 (48) Elenbaas, Laura elenbaas@umd.edu 4-058 (54) Enns, Leah N. l_enns@hotmail.com 2-042 (41), 3-006 (71), 4-023 (12) Eckenrode, John jje1@cornell.edu 3-024 (16), 3-044 (45) Eley, Thalia thalia.eley@kcl.ac.uk 3-024 (70) Epstein, Marina marinaep@uw.edu 3-032 Eckstein, Katharina katharina.eckstein@uni-jena.de 2-027, 4-041 (24) Elgin, Jenna E. jennae2@uw.edu 2-005 (61) Erath, Stephen sae0001@auburn.edu 4-027 Eddy, J. Mark marke@oslc.org 3-068 Elkayam, Keren keren.elkayam@tufts.edu 2-039 Edell, Dana dana.edell@nyu.edu 4-041 (78) Elledge, Christian lelledge@ku.edu 3-064 Erdley, Cynthia A. cynthia.erdley@umit.maine.edu 2-042 (31), 2-060 (4), 3-006 (46), 3006 (47), 3-051 (70), 4-005 (44), 4-005 (57) Effinger, Jenell effinj@spu.edu 2-005 (66) Ellen, Jonathan M. jellen@jhmi.edu 4-023 (36) Egeland, Byron R. egela001@umn.edu 4-066 Ellerbrock, Cheryl ellerbro@usf.edu 3-051 (84) Eguchi, Megumi egmeg@human.tsukuba.ac.jp 2-005 (69) Elliott, Luther C. luther@nyu.edu 4-041 (39) Ehrenreich, Heidi heidivic@uga.edu 4-004 Ellis, Bruce bjellis@email.arizona.edu 3-052, 3-052 Ehrlich, Katherine B. katie.b.ehrlich@gmail.com 2-055, 2-055, 4-031 Ellis, Mei Ling mlellis@casey.org 2-066 Eiden, Rina eiden@ria.buffalo.edu 2-060 (32) Ellis, Wendy wendy.ellis@uwo.ca 3-006 (53), 3-006 (54), 3-044 (53), 4041 (77) Eidson, R. C. eidson.r@husky.neu.edu 3-024 (3) Eivers, Areana a.eivers@qut.edu.au 3-006 (63) Ekwaru, John Paul pekwaru@berkeley.edu 2-024 (2) El-Sheikh, Mona elshemm@auburn.edu 3-044 (38), 3-052 Elmgren, Sandra sandraelmgren@gmail.com 2-024 (72), 4-005 (48) Elmore, Corinn A. celmore1@luc.edu 2-005 (81), 3-060 Engels, Rutger C. r.engels@bsi.ru.nl 2-005 (39), 2-024 (51), 2-042 (59), 2054, 2-054, 2-065, 2-065, 3-051 (38), 4-005 (32), 4-023 (32), 4-034, 4-041 (35), 4-041 (75), 4-042, 4-058 (41), 4058 (69), 4-063 136 Erentaite, Rasa rasae@mruni.eu 2-024 (50) Ernestus, Stephanie M. s.ernestus@gmail.com 3-051 (61) Ernst, Monique ernstm@mail.nih.gov 2-042 (1), 3-023 Ersanilli, Evelyn evelyn.ersanilli@qeh.ox.ac.uk 3-040 Eskridge, Samantha sdeskridge@wichita.edu 4-058 (61) Espel, Emma emma.espel@gmail.com 2-024 (14) Espelage, Dorothy espelage@illinois.edu 2-042 (45), 3-022 Espinosa-Hernandez, Graciela hernandezm@uncw.edu 2-060 (56), 3-044 (37), 4-010 Espinoza, Guadalupe g.espinoza@ucla.edu 4-058 (45) Esposito-Smythers, Christianne cesposi1@gmu.edu 3-051 (40) Essex, Marilyn J. mjessex@wisc.edu 2-012, 2-042 (73), 2-067 Estell, David B. destell@indiana.edu 2-042 (23), 4-005 (76) Ettekal, Idean idean.ettekal@asu.edu 2-042 (53) Etz, Kathy ketz@nida.nih.gov 2-006 (G6), 3-047 Euser, Anja euser@fsw.eur.nl 4-042 Evans, Brittany b.evans@erasmusmc.nl 4-042 Evian-Waasdorp, Tracy twaasdor@jhsph.edu 4-017 Ewing Lee, Elisabeth elizabeth.ewinglee@ndsu.edu 2-014 Exner-Cortens, Deinera dme56@cornell.edu 3-024 (16), 3-044 (45) Faas, Caitlin caitlin.faas@gmail.com 3-006 (20) Fabes, Richard richard.fabes@asu.edu 2-005 (79), 2-060 (53) Facio, Alicia afacio@arnet.com.ar 4-013 Falco, Lia ldf@email.arizona.edu 3-024 (24) Fales, Jessica Jessica.Fales@umaine.edu 2-060 (57), 4-023 (55) Fales, Jessica fales@ohsu.edu 4-023 (57) Falk, Emily emilybfalk@gmail.com 2-025 Fan, Fang fangfan@scnu.edu.cn 2-005 (62), 2-060 (62), 3-006 (58), 4005 (63), 4-023 (63), 4-041 (61), 4-058 (64), 4-058 (65) Fang, Xiangming ddz6@cdc.gov 2-072 Feng, Xin xfeng@ehe.osu.edu 2-042 (54), 3-044 (60) Farahmand, Farahnaz FFARAHMA@depaul.edu 2-034, 2-053 Fernald, Lia C. fernald@berkeley.edu 4-060 Farhat, Tilda farhatti@mail.nih.gov 4-005 (28) Fernandes, Brendan bf230054@msn.com 3-038 Farley, Julee P. farleyjp@vt.edu 2-060 (39), 3-006 (78), 3-024 (40), 4041 (73) Fernandez, Jose jose@uab.edu 2-043 Farrell, Albert D. afarrell@vcu.edu 4-017 Fassnacht, Greg gfassnac@my.uno.edu 3-044 (69) Faulstich Orellana, Marjorie orellana@gseis.ucla.edu 2-056 Fava, Nicole M. nmfava@buffalo.edu 3-049, 3-049 Feddes, Allard R. A.R.Feddes@uva.nl 3-040, 3-040 Feinberg, Mark mef11@psu.edu 2-060 (14), 4-014, 4-057 Feinstein, Brian feinstein.br@gmail.com 2-024 (61) Fernandez, Maria mafernandez@stanford.edu 2-039 Fernandez, Mario mafv08@yahoo.com 4-058 (21) Ferris, Kaitlyn A. Kaitlyn.Ferris@mail.wvu.edu 3-051 (24), 4-041 (16) Fetz, Gelgia gelgia.fetz@jacobsfoundation.org 2-006 (G8) Field, Ryan rdfield@asu.edu 2-060 (75) Fielder, Robyn L. rlfielde@syr.edu 3-032 Fils-Aime, Lyrica D. lfa234@nyu.edu 2-060 (46) Finan, Laura J. ljfinan4@gmail.com 2-005 (4), 2-024 (4), 2-042 (4) Feiring, Candice feiring@tcnj.edu 4-005 (4) Feld, Benjamin bfeld81@yahoo.com 2-024 (12) Felleman, Ben fellemanb@spu.edu 2-005 (66), 2-042 (33) Felmet, Kandi kfelmet1@student.gsu.edu 4-046 Feng, Bei Bei.Feng@psy.ulaval.ca 4-041 (20) 137 Findlay, Caroline crros2@student.monash.edu 3-017 Findlay, Leanne leannefindlay@hotmail.com 4-005 (17) Findley, Danielle dfindley@mail.usf.edu 3-051 (50), 4-005 (74) Fine, Mark A. Mafine@uncg.edu 2-005 (78) Finlay, Andrea akf134@psu.edu 2-041, 3-044 (17), 4-049.5 Flores, Lluliana I. lflores7@asu.edu 4-041 (81) Foster, Sharon L. sfoster@alliant.edu 4-041 (50), 4-058 (71) Fischer, Sarah sfische1@utk.edu 2-067, 3-006 (70), 3-051 (57) Flory, Kate FLORYK@mailbox.sc.edu 4-058 (63) Foust, Monica mfoust@umich.edu 2-069, 2-069, 4-049 Fisher, Gene fisher@soc.umass.edu 4-055 Flynn, Jessica jflynn12@kent.edu 3-006 (72) Fowler, Stephanie spfowler@sfu.ca 2-060 (77) Fite, Paula J. pfite@ku.edu 2-024 (68), 4-005 (68) Flynn, Megan megan-flynn@bethel.edu 3-067, 4-023 (73), 4-047 Fox, Melanie K. mkf22008@mymail.pomona.edu 3-051 (7) Fitzgerald, Hiram fitzger9@msu.edu 4-058 (17) Folan, Tara K. tarafolan@hotmail.com 3-006 (67) Fox, Nathan fox@umd.edu 2-042 (1), 4-031, 4-031 Fitzpatrick, Sally sally.fitzpatrick@mq.edu.au 4-019 Fomby, Paula Paula.Fomby@ucdenver.edu 2-011 Franche, Véronique vfran053@uottawa.ca 2-060 (18) Fivush, Robyn psyrf@emory.edu 2-019 Fong, Carlton J. cfong@sedl.org 4-058 (77) Francis, Shelley A. sfrancis@cph.osu.edu 4-041 (60) Flache, Andreas a.flache@rug.nl 4-041 (27), 4-061 Fontes, Monique T. monique.fontes@duke.edu 3-006 (12) Francois, Amir G. agf4df@virginia.edu 4-041 (49) Flamm, Elizabeth S. eflamm@clarku.edu 2-060 (8), 3-028, 4-041 (74) Forbes, Erika E. forbese@upmc.edu 2-030, 2-049 Frank, John A. jaf499@nyu.edu 2-060 (82) Flanagan, Connie caflanagan@wisc.edu 2-007, 2-027, 2-047, 3-020, 3-043 Ford, Hannah Hannah.Ford@umit.maine.edu 2-060 (57), 4-023 (55) Franken, Ingmar franken@fsw.eur.nl 4-042 Flanagan, Tara Tara.Flanagan@mcgill.ca 4-058 (22) Forehand, Rex forehand@uga.edu 2-004, 3-051 (62), 4-023 (10) Franklin, Joseph C. franjc1@email.unc.edu 4-039 Flay, Brian R. Brian.Flay@oregonstate.edu 2-053 Forgatch, Marion S. marionf@oslc.org 4-058 (61) Franzini, Luisa Luisa.Franzini@uth.tmc.edu 3-030 Fleming, Charles cnbflem@uw.edu 2-005 (61), 3-032 Forrest, Christopher B. FORRESTC@email.chop.edu 4-024 Fraser, Ashley ashley.fraser@live.com 3-051 (75) Fletcher, Anne C. acfletch@uncg.edu 3-024 (83), 3-044 (83) Forrester, Lyndon D. Lephilosopher@gmail.com 3-006 (3) Frazier, Kathryn kfrazier@clarku.edu 4-040, 4-040 Flittner, Allison E. flittner@iastate.edu 3-006 (10) Fortner, Adrian adrian.fortner@gmail.com 3-044 (32) Fredricks, Jennifer jfred@conncoll.edu 2-050 Flores, Elena florese@usfca.edu 3-051 (35), 4-041 (55) Fosco, Gregory M. gmf19@psu.edu 3-051 (65) 138 Freeman, Harry hfreeman@usd.edu 2-024 (56) Futch, Valerie vaf5a@Virginia.EDU 2-071, 3-004, 4-002.5 Ganeva, Zornitza R. zganeva@abv.bg 2-005 (49) Freitas, Miguel mfreitas@ispa.pt 2-060 (70) Fyfe, Molly mollyfyfe@yahoo.com 2-024 (2) Ganiban, Jody M. ganiban@gwu.edu 3-009 French, Sabine E. sefrench@uic.edu 2-062, 4-041 (30) Gabay, Itay gabay@wisc.edu 2-047 Garandeau, Claire F. garandeauclaire@hotmail.com 4-069, 4-069 Friedman, Lawrence LFriedma@med.miami.edu 4-058 (51) Gabhainn, Saoirse nic saoirse.nicgabhainn@nuigalway.ie 4-005 (28) Garber, Judy judy.garber@vanderbilt.edu 4-051 Friedman, Mark S. msf11@pitt.edu 2-023, 2-023, 4-041 (82) Gadbois, Shannon gadbois@brandonu.ca 4-005 (17) Gardner, Margo gardner@tc.edu 2-005 (11) Friemel, Thomas th.friemel@ipmz.uzh.ch 4-072 Gaertner, Alden E. agaertne@utk.edu 2-024 (68) Garelik, Karen T. garelikkt@upmc.edu 3-024 (71) Frijns, Tom t.frijns@uu.nl 2-016, 4-012, 4-030 Gagne, Monique H. moniquehgagne@hotmail.com 3-031 Garg, Rashmi rgarg@laurentian.ca 2-060 (22) Frimer, Jeremy A. jeremyfrimer@gmail.com 4-037 Gagnon, Nathalie C. nathalie.gagnon@kwantlen.ca 4-058 (20) Garofalo, Robert rgarofalo@childrensmemorial.org 3-011 Frisén, Ann ann.frisen@psy.gu.se 3-044 (80) Galambos, Nancy galambos@ualberta.ca 4-058 (78) Gartner, Meaghan gartml8@wfu.edu 3-006 (81) Fruiht, Veronica M. vfruiht@gmail.com 3-024 (26) Galiani, Margaret galiani@bc.edu 2-042 (37) Gaskin, Ashly L. algaskin@unc.edu 3-006 (29) Fryberg, Stephanie fryberg@u.arizona.edu 2-058 Gallagher, Annabella amg5741@psu.edu 3-051 (67) Gaskin, Erin R. ergaskin@uncg.edu 3-024 (83), 3-044 (83) Fujiwara, Takeshi tfujiwar@human.tsukuba.ac.jp 2-005 (69) Gallarin, Miriam miriam.gallarin@ehu.es 3-024 (6), 4-045 Gasser, Luciano luciano.gasser@phz.ch 2-070 Fuligni, Andrew J. afuligni@ucla.edu 2-025, 2-043, 4-005 (8), 4-058 (30), 4058 (45) Gallay, Leslie gallay@wisc.edu 2-047 Gaudreau, Patrick Patrick.Gaudreau@uottawa.ca 2-060 (18) Galliher, Renee V. renee.galliher@usu.edu 2-060 (81), 4-005 (55), 4-023 (45) Gayles, Jochebed G. yochevehg@gmail.com 2-005 (46) Galvan, Adriana galan@ucla.edu 2-025 Gaylord-Harden, Noni K. ngaylor@luc.edu 2-005 (81), 2-024 (60), 2-034, 2-042 (64), 2-060 (64) Fuller-Rowell, Thomas E. tom.fullerrowell@gmail.com 3-044 (29) Furman, Wyndol wfurman@psy.du.edu 2-005 (56) Furry, Allyson allyson_furry@yahoo.com 4-023 (22) Gamino, Jacquelyn F. jgamino@utdallas.edu 2-073, 2-073, 2-073, 2-073 139 Gebelt, Janet L. jgebelt@wsc.ma.edu 1-006, 2-060 (80) Giles, Heather R. hgileswoerner@unomaha.edu 3-006 (43) Godeau, Emmanuelle emmanuelle.godeau@ac-toulouse.fr 4-005 (28) Gebre, Azeb azeb.gebre@temple.edu 3-044 (10), 3-044 (25) Giletta, Matteo m.giletta@pwo.ru.nl 2-024 (51) Godfrey, Erin erin.godfrey@nyu.edu 2-007, 2-007 Gee, Christina B. cgee@gwu.edu 2-060 (5), 3-006 (5) Gillen, Meghan M. mmg204@psu.edu 3-024 (36), 4-058 (36) Goessling, Kristen kgoosey@gmail.com 2-060 (7) Geldhof, G. John john.geldhof@tufts.edu 2-042 (77), 4-041 (76), 4-058 (79) Gillen-O'Neel, Cari c.go@ucla.edu 4-058 (83) Gola, Kelly kgola@ucsc.edu 4-005 (47) Geng, Fulei fuleigeng@yahoo.cn 2-060 (62), 4-005 (63), 4-023 (63) Gini, Gianluca gianluca.gini@unipd.it 3-027, 4-019, 4-019 Goldstein, Kim E. kim.goldstein@temple.edu 3-051 (1) Gennetian, Lisa A. gennetl@nber.org 4-071 Gitere, Anne anygitere@yahoo.com 2-042 (26) Goldston, David david.goldston@dm.duke.edu 3-006 (12) Gentsch, Joanna jgentsch@utdallas.edu 2-042 (69) Gladstone, Emilie J. eglad@uvic.ca 2-071, 4-005 (5) Goldweber, Asha agoldweb@jhsph.edu 4-017 Gentzler, Amy L. amy.gentzler@mail.wvu.edu 2-049, 2-049, 2-049, 4-005 (72) Gladstone, Tracy tgladsto@wellesley.edu 4-051, 4-051 Gomez, Jessica jmgomez@bu.edu 2-007 Gerardy, Haeli hgerardy1@niu.edu 2-044 Glantz, Molly meg257@cornell.edu 3-051 (18) Gondoli, Dawn M. dgondoli@nd.edu 4-041 (7) Gershoff, Liz liz.gershoff@austin.utexas.edu 2-029 Glenn, Jno jno.glenn@gmail.com 2-024 (79) Gonzales, Felisa A. felisag@gwmail.gwu.edu 4-023 (36) Gerstein, Amy Gerstein@stanford.edu 2-039 Glick, Gary C. Gary.Glick@mizzou.edu 3-048, 4-063 Gest, Scott gest@psu.edu 2-038, 4-014, 4-057 Gloppen, Kari kgloppen@uw.edu 3-024 (67) Gonzales, Nancy nancy.gonzales@asu.edu 2-005 (55), 3-006 (7), 3-006 (17), 3030, 4-058 (23), 4-058 (30) Gfellner, Barbara M. gfellner@brandonu.ca 2-015, 3-051 (78) Glozman, Jenny jenny.glozman@gmail.com 2-024 (71) Ghelani, Karen karenghelani@yahoo.com 3-051 (59) Glueck, Benjamin benaglueck@gmail.com 2-060 (44) Gibson, Kimberly kimgibson@ku.edu 2-005 (65) Gnerre, Brian bgnerre@willamette.edu 3-044 (9) Gieling, Maike m.gieling@uu.nl 2-070 Gniewosz, Burkhard Burkhard.Gniewosz@uni-wuerzburg.de 2-024 (17), 2-027, 3-037, 3-037, 4-041 (24), 4-061 140 Gonzalez, Michelle gmichell@email.unc.edu 4-023 (10) Goodenow, Carol cgoodenow@doe.mass.edu 4-023 (35) Goodlett, Benjamin goodlettb@gmail.com 2-005 (71) Goodman, Elizabeth egoodman3@partners.org 4-060, 4-060 Goodwin, Brady bradycgoodwin@gmail.com 4-051 Goodwin, Natalie natgoodwin@gmail.com 4-023 (33) Goossens, Luc luc.goossens@psy.kuleuven.be 2-005 (74) Gordon, Anna bnielsen7@gmail.com 2-024 (19) Gordon, Chanelle chtgordon@berkeley.edu 2-060 (13) Gordon, Nirit ng819@nyu.edu 4-041 (78) Gordon, Robert Robert.D.Gordon@ndsu.edu 2-014 Gorman-Smith, Deborah dgormansmith@chapinhall.org 3-004, 3-011 Gottardo, Alexandra alexandra.gottardo@gmail.com 2-005 (13), 2-024 (58) Gottwald, Frances francesgottwald@hotmail.com 3-024 (6), 3-051 (23), 4-045 Gowen, Kris gowen@pdx.edu 3-051 (37) Goza, Barbara K. bkgoza@ucsc.edu 2-005 (23) Graber, Julia A. jagraber@ufl.edu 2-005 (10), 2-024 (48), 2-060 (1), 3026, 3-026, 4-041 (44) Graham, Dan J. djgraham@umn.edu 3-044 (35) Graham, John W. jwg801@gmail.com 3-006 (60) Graham, Nicholas J. meineko7@gmail.com 2-060 (26) Graham, Rebecca rgraha6@tigers.lsu.edu 3-044 (73) Graham, Sandra graham@gseis.ucla.edu 2-024 (54), 2-060 (17), 3-051 (22), 4018, 4-023 (48), 4-041 (48), 4-062 Granic, Isabella i.granic@pwo.ru.nl 4-030, 4-042 Granillo, Christina M. cmgranillo@gmail.com 2-056 Grant, David A. dgrant@temple.edu 4-047 Grant, Kathryn kgrant@depaul.edu 2-020, 2-020, 2-024 (60), 2-028, 2034, 2-034, 2-034, 2-053 Grassetti, Stevie N. StevieNGrassetti@gmail.com 3-021, 3-044 (61), 4-005 (67) Gravener, Julie A. julie.gravener@gmail.com 3-051 (4) Gray, Alexander alexandergray22@gmail.com 4-037 Gray, Melissa L. MG9882@hws.edu 3-006 (46) Gray, Samantha L. sgray19@utk.edu 3-051 (57), 3-059, 4-023 (56), 4-041 (45) Greaves-Lord, Kirstin k.greaves-lord@erasmusmc.nl 4-042 Green, Amy R. amyrosegreen@gmail.com 4-005 (65) Green, Courtney B. greenc1@umbc.edu 2-042 (5) Green, Harold hgreen@rand.org 3-058, 3-058 Greenberger, Ellen egreenbe@uci.edu 2-005 (28) Greene, Alison greene@email.arizona.edu 3-014 Greenfield, Patricia greenfield@psych.ucla.edu 2-056, 4-023 (28) Greenham, Stephanie greenham@cheo.on.ca 2-005 (59) Greenley, Rachel N. rachel.greenley@rosalindfranklin.edu 3-024 (31) Greenwald, Mark K. mgreen@med.wayne.edu 2-003 Gregorich, Steven gregorich@psa.ucsf.edu 3-051 (35) Gregory, Sandra scgregor2@gmail.com 3-027 Greytak, Emily egreytak@glsen.org 2-035 Griffin, Amanda roxanna.a.griffin@gmail.com 3-006 (20) Griffith, Aisha aishagriffith@gmail.com 2-013, 2-050 Griffith, Shayl SGriffith@clarku.edu 2-060 (8) Groendal, Reky rekymartha@gmail.com 2-060 (42) Groh-Samberg, Olaf ogrohsamberg@bigsss.uni-bremen.de 2-064 Grolnick, Wendy S. wgrolnick@clarku.edu 2-060 (8), 2-077, 3-028, 4-041 (74) Greenberg, Elysha elysha.greenberg1@gmail.com 4-041 (63) Greenberg, Mark T. mxg47@psu.edu 2-055, 3-006 (60), 3-044 (7), 4-004 141 Grossman, Arnold H. arnold.grossman@nyu.edu 2-060 (82) Grossman, Jennifer M. jgrossma@wellesley.edu 4-058 (28) Gumidyala, Amitha P. amitha.prasad@gmail.com 3-024 (31) Haddock, Shelley Shelley.Haddock@colostate.edu 3-044 (65) Grouzet, Frederick fgrouzet@uvic.ca 4-053 Gunnar, Megan gunnar@umn.edu 4-005 (77) Hafen, Christopher A. cah3wy@virginia.edu 2-042 (56), 3-006 (56), 3-044 (5) Grover, Christine cgrover@bates.edu 4-058 (60) Gunnoe, Marjorie L. mgunnoe@calvin.edu 2-042 (16) Hagan, Melissa melissa.hagan@asu.edu 3-052 Grover, Rachel rlgrover@loyola.edu 4-041 (42), 4-041 (43) Guo, Xiamei xguo@ehe.osu.edu 3-044 (6) Hager, Alanna D. ahager23@uvic.ca 3-024 (42) Groves, Juliana julzgroves@gmail.com 4-041 (33) Gupta, Taveeshi taveeshi.gupta@nyu.edu 2-042 (27), 2-042 (61), 2-060 (30), 3024 (25) Haggerty, Kevin haggerty@u.washington.edu 2-067, 3-032, 4-023 (66) Gruber, Diane M. dgruber@wellesley.edu 4-058 (28) Guroglu, Berna bguroglu@fsw.leidenuniv.nl 2-060 (76), 3-023 Gruppuso, Vincenza vincenza@uvic.ca 3-006 (34), 3-024 (22), 3-041, 3-044 (64) Guthridge, Laura E. lguthridge1@gmail.com 3-006 (48), 3-006 (57) Grusec, Joan grusec@psych.utoronto.ca 3-051 (73), 4-005 (11) Gutzwiller-Helfenfinger, Eveline eveline.gutzwiller@phz.ch 3-027, 3-027 Grych, John john.grych@mu.edu 2-060 (49), 3-044 (13), 3-051 (45), 4044 Gutíerrez, Carmen M. cgutierr@uccs.edu 2-024 (4), 2-042 (4) Guan, Shu-Sha A. angelatasp@gmail.com 2-056, 4-005 (8) Gudmundsen, Gretchen ggud@uw.edu 2-036, 4-035 Guendelman, Sylvia sylviag@berkeley.edu 4-060 Guerra, Nancy nguerra@udel.edu 1-003, 2-042 (65), 2-060 (69), 3-043, 4-029, 4-065 Guerry, Whitney wab10@duke.edu 3-048 Guhn, Martin martin.guhn@ubc.ca 4-025, 4-025 Guimond, Amy Amy.Guimond@asu.edu 2-029, 4-023 (9) Guy, William willcguy@comcast.net 3-051 (19) Guyer, Amanda E. aeguyer@ucdavis.edu 2-030, 2-042 (1), 3-051 (49) Gwadz, Marya mg2890@nyu.edu 3-044 (4), 4-023 (37) Hague, Samantha M. shague7862@westfield.ma.edu 2-060 (80) Hahm, Hyeouk C. hahm@bu.edu 4-023 (65) Hains, Jennifer jennifer.hains1@uqac.ca 4-041 (62) Hale, William W. b.hale@uu.nl 2-016, 2-016, 2-016, 2-016, 2-042 (58) Halfond, Raquel halfondrw@vcu.edu 2-024 (38), 2-060 (35), 4-005 (31) Halgunseth, Linda C. lch15@psu.edu 3-044 (37) Hall, Brittany hallb2@spu.edu 3-006 (33) Hall, Georgia ghall@wellesley.edu 4-058 (28) Ha, Thao T.Ha@bsi.ru.nl 4-063, 4-063 Hall, Micah micahbh@ostatemail.okstate.edu 4-058 (40) Haataja, Anne anmahaa@utu.fi 3-064 Habermas, Tilmann tilmann.habermas@psych.unifrankfurt.de 2-019, 2-037 Hablemitoglu, Sengul hablemit@gmail.com 4-058 (2) 142 Hall, Sarah E. sarah.hall@wheaton.edu 2-060 (46) Hamaguchi, Yoshikazu ythama@m3.dion.ne.jp 2-005 (69) Hamel, Andrea ahamel@sfu.ca 3-024 (45) Hanson, Jamie jamielarshanson@gmail.com 2-012 Harrell-Levy, Marinda K. turntaking@gmail.com 4-041 (66) Hamilton, Mary A. mah15@cornell.edu 2-047, 2-063 Hanson, Jennifer L. Jennifer.Hanson2@gmail.com 4-058 (3) Harris, Alexis R. alexis.harris@psu.edu 2-024 (25) Hamilton, Stephen F. sfh3@cornell.edu 2-047, 2-047, 2-063, 4-041 (26) Harakeh, Zeena z.harakeh@uu.nl 2-005 (39), 3-006 (2), 3-051 (38) Harris, Jennifer harrij10@spu.edu 2-042 (33) Hamlat, Elissa J. elissa.hamlat@temple.edu 3-051 (1) Haralson, Kate kate.haralson@cchmc.org 3-006 (84) Harris, Michelle A. micharris@ucdavis.edu 4-023 (19) Hamm, Jill jhamm@live.unc.edu 3-024 (23) Hardcastle, Cheshire hardcace@mail.uc.edu 3-006 (84) Harrison, Kristen krisnotkristen@gmail.com 4-026 Hammack, Phil L. hammack@ucsc.edu 2-021, 3-040 Harden, Kathryn P. harden@psy.utexas.edu 2-005 (48), 2-042 (19), 2-060 (51) Harrison, Patrick pharrison1@luc.edu 2-024 (15) Hampton, Joel jhampton@rti.org 3-051 (36) Harden, Troy tharden@csu.edu 4-046 Hart, Dan daniel.hart@rutgers.edu 3-015, 4-033 Han, Bing bing_han@rand.org 4-055 Harding, Jessica F. jess.harding@nyu.edu 3-016, 3-044 (22) Hart, Emily emilyhart24@gmail.com 4-041 (69) Han, Georges hghan@ucdavis.edu 4-073 Hardy, Sam A. sam_hardy@byu.edu 2-060 (78), 4-037, 4-037 Harter, James J. jimbo71490@hotmail.com 2-024 (32) Hancock, Donna dlhanc2@uga.edu 4-058 (57) Hare, Amanda ahare2@une.edu 2-042 (55), 4-041 (71) Hartl, Amy C. ahartl@fau.edu 2-060 (33), 3-024 (4), 3-044 (5), 3-051 (48) Hang, Guanqi ghang@nd.edu 2-024 (20) Harkins, Elizabeth eahark13@g.holycross.edu 2-060 (38) Hanish, Laura D. laura.hanish@asu.edu 2-005 (79), 2-060 (53), 3-006 (51) Harmon, Rebecca A. harmon.rebecca@gmail.com 3-051 (53) Hannigan, John H. j.hannigan@wayne.edu 2-003 Harmon-Jones, Eddie eddiehj@gmail.com 4-047 Hansel, Joseph hanselj@uindy.edu 2-042 (23) Harold, Gordon T. gth9@le.ac.uk 3-009, 3-068 Hansen, David dhansen1@ku.edu 2-050, 3-019 Harper, Bridgette D. bharper3@aum.edu 4-058 (43) Hansen, Erik nesnahkire@gmail.com 2-024 (1) Harper, Melinda S. harperm@queens.edu 3-044 (54) 143 Harven, Aletha M. aletha_h@yahoo.com 4-041 (19) Harvey, Kristin E. Kriskristin.harvey@austin.utexas.edu 3-051 (2) Hasking, Penelope Penelope.Hasking@monash.edu 4-015 Hastings, Paul D. pdhastings@ucdavis.edu 2-060 (71), 4-039 Hatzenbuehler, Mark L. mlh2101@columbia.edu 2-009 Haughey, Leslie laspenc@ostatemail.okstate.edu 2-024 (10) Heinze, Justin E. jheinze@umich.edu 2-060 (23) Herman, Rebecca rherman@air.org 2-039 Hawk, Larry lhawk@buffalo.edu 2-005 (31), 2-060 (32), 3-024 (32), 3024 (33), 4-023 (51) Helms, Sarah sarahwrayhelms@gmail.com 4-023 (52) Hernandez, Jillian jillian.hernandez@gmail.com 2-026 Helwig, Charles C. helwig@psych.utoronto.ca 4-058 (10) Hernández, María G. mgh260@nyu.edu 3-016, 3-024 (81) Henderson, Heather A. h.henderson@miami.edu 4-031 Herres, Joanna joannaherres@psych.udel.edu 2-042 (63), 3-044 (61), 4-005 (67) Henderson, Marion marion@sphsu.mrc.ac.uk 2-054 Herring, Amy amy_herring@unc.edu 3-051 (31) Hendricks, Charlene hendricc@mail.nih.gov 2-024 (57), 3-006 (16), 3-044 (11) Herring, Tracy E. teh7@uw.edu 2-005 (33) Hendrickson, Kelsie hendkel2@isu.edu 2-024 (77) Hershenberg, Rachel rhershenberg@gmail.com 2-024 (61) Henneberger, Angela akh5z@Virginia.EDU 2-071, 3-004, 3-004 Herte, Amanda aherte18@gmail.com 2-005 (75) Hennig, Karl khennig@uoguelph.ca 3-024 (44), 4-005 (69) Hertz, Robin robinmariehertz@gmail.com 3-024 (55), 3-044 (55), 3-051 (55) Henry, Carolyn carolyn.henry@okstate.edu 2-024 (45), 4-058 (25) Hertzman, Clyde clyde.hertzman@ubc.ca 4-025 Henry, David dhenry@uic.edu 2-071, 3-004, 3-011, 3-011, 4-022 Herzig, Kathleen kathleen.herzig@nyumc.edu 3-006 (49) Henry, Jessica jhenry@gwmail.gwu.edu 3-024 (15), 3-044 (15) Hesemeyer, Paloma phesemeyer@gmail.com 3-044 (56) Henry, Mylène mylene.henry@uqtr.ca 2-060 (2) Hessel, Elenda T. eth4bh@virginia.edu 3-006 (56), 3-024 (75), 4-005 (49), 4063 Hawk, Skyler T. s.t.hawk@uu.nl 2-042 (14), 4-002, 4-012, 4-041 (72) Hawkins, J. David jdh@u.washington.edu 2-039, 3-032 Hawkins, Stacy A. shawkins@email.arizona.edu 4-055, 4-055, 4-055 Hawley, Patricia H. phawley@ku.edu 4-041 (36) Haydon, Abigail ahaydon@email.unc.edu 3-051 (31) Hayhurst, Jill jill.hayhurst@gmail.com 4-005 (24) Hayman, Jennifer haymanj@bgsu.edu 2-042 (15) Hearon, Brittany hearbv8@wfu.edu 2-024 (84), 2-061 Heaven, Chelsea cheaven@indiana.edu 2-014 Heaven, Patrick pheaven@uow.edu.au 4-058 (80) Hecht, Kathryn hecht022@umn.edu 2-005 (76) Hee, Puanani phee@hawaii.edu 2-024 (52) Heine, Steven heine@psych.ubc.ca 2-076 Heinz, Walter Joint.Ad.Venture@t-online.de 2-064 Hepditch, Jennifer jennifer.hepditch@gmail.com 2-024 (42) Herge, Whitney M. w.herge@umiami.edu 2-005 (43), 2-005 (44), 2-042 (43) Herman, Levi leviian13@yahoo.com 3-023 144 Hiatt, Cody chiatt@fau.edu 2-060 (33), 3-024 (4), 3-044 (5), 3-051 (48) Hickle, Kristine kehickle@asu.edu 2-005 (36) Hicks, Brian hicks013@umn.edu 4-066 Hipwell, Alison hipwellae@upmc.edu 3-004 Holt, Melissa K. melissa.k.holt@gmail.com 2-072, 2-072 Higgins, Katy mkhiggins@unc.edu 4-041 (71) Hirsch, Barton J. bhirsch@northwestern.edu 3-051 (16) Homan, Kendra kendrajoyh@yahoo.com 3-051 (70) Hill, Danielle C. Danielle.Hill.89@gmail.com 3-024 (66) Hitchcock, Shannon shannonmhitchcock@gmail.com 4-028 Homel, Jacqueline jacqueline.homel@gmail.com 3-006 (34) Hill, Erin N. e.n.hill@gmail.com 2-042 (47) Hitti, Aline ahitti@umd.edu 3-044 (74), 3-051 (3), 4-058 (54) Homel, Jacqueline B. jhomel@uvic.ca 3-024 (22) Hill, Heather HHill@uchicago.edu 4-071 Ho, Bao baoster356@gmail.com 2-024 (11) Honda, Yasuyo S. syasuyo824@yahoo.co.jp 2-005 (69) Hill, Julie C. juliehill@ufl.edu 2-024 (48) Hochberg, Marcy J. mhochb2@uic.edu 4-058 (33) Hope, Meredith O. meredith@huskers.unl.edu 3-044 (78), 3-060, 3-060, 3-060 Hill, Karl G. khill@uw.edu 3-032 Hock, Amelia amelia.hock@temple.edu 3-006 (44), 3-024 (52) Hops, Hyman hy@ori.org 4-022 Hill, Kate M. khill@connect.carleton.ca 3-006 (23) Hockenberry, Melanie K. mhockenb@mix.wvu.edu 4-058 (31) Hord, Melissa melissa_hord@umit.maine.edu 2-042 (31), 3-006 (47), 4-005 (44) Hill, Nancy E. hillna@gse.harvard.edu 2-059, 4-011 Hodges, Ernest V. hodgese@stjohns.edu 2-057, 2-057, 4-069 Horenczyk, Gabriel gabriel@vms.huji.ac.il 4-045 Hill, Patrick L. phill1@illinois.edu 2-018, 3-039, 3-039 Hoglund, Wendy hoglund@ualberta.ca 4-058 (78) Horn, Stacey sshorn@uic.edu 2-069, 2-069, 4-058 (33) Hill, Rachelle hill0896@umn.edu 4-020 Holder, Crystal allen.crystalr@gmail.com 4-028 Horne, Melissa meli.horne@gmail.com 4-058 (13) Hille, Helene helene.hille@googlemail.com 4-023 (83) Holland, Kristin imh1@cdc.gov 2-072 Horsley, Tako t.horsley@vu.nl 2-014 Hillman, Kimberly khillma@linfield.edu 4-058 (32) Hollenstein, Tom tom.hollenstein@queensu.ca 2-024 (71), 2-042 (71), 3-006 (72), 4003, 4-003, 4-023 (71), 4-030, 4-030 Horta, Mariana mhorta@rand.org 3-058 Hinkle, Henry L. henry.hinkleNIU@gmail.com 4-005 (29) Hinnant, J. Benjamin hinnant@cua.edu 3-052 Hinshaw, Stephen P. hinshaw@berkeley.edu 2-060 (13) Holloway, Susan D. s_hollo@berkeley.edu 3-044 (20) Holmbeck, Grayson gholmbe@luc.edu 2-042 (2), 2-042 (38), 2-060 (31) Holmes, Rachel rachelmholmes@gmail.com 4-023 (56), 4-041 (45) 145 Horwitz, Briana bnh2@psu.edu 3-009, 3-009 Houltberg, Benjamin houltbeb@ipfw.edu 4-005 (71), 4-058 (74) Houri, Alaa houri005@umn.edu 4-073 Houser, John J. john.houser@nau.edu 4-005 (45), 4-054 Hudgens, Tanee M. tanee@email.unc.edu 2-024 (22), 4-018, 4-023 (29) Hurley, Sean sean.hurley@uvm.edu 3-051 (12) Houston, Jessica jessica.houston@mu.edu 3-044 (13), 4-044 Huebner, Angela ahuebner@nvc.vt.edu 4-055 Hurt, Hallam hurt@email.chop.edu 2-005 (40) Houts, Renate rh93@duke.edu 4-005 (38) Huebner, David david.huebner@psych.utah.edu 2-024 (83) Hurtado, Aida aida@chicst.ucsb.edu 3-025 Howard, Andrea andrea.howard@unc.edu 2-003 Hueniken, Alexa ahuenike@uoguelph.ca 4-023 (8) Husain, Masud m.husain@ion.ucl.ac.uk 3-023 Howard, Donna E. dhoward1@umd.edu 4-041 (83) Huey, Stanley hueyjr@usc.edu 3-024 (34) Hussong, Andrea M. hussong@unc.edu 2-003, 4-041 (9) Howard, Waylon J. waylon@ku.edu 4-067 Hughes, Diane diane.hughes@nyu.edu 3-016, 3-016, 3-016, 3-024 (81), 3-044 (22), 4-011, 4-071 Hust, Stacey J. sjhust@wsu.edu 2-024 (30) Howe, Nina nina.howe@education.concordia.ca 4-041 (13), 4-058 (16) Hser, Yih-Ing yhser@ucla.edu 4-058 (15) Hsieh, Hsien-Lin Hhsieh3@uga.edu 4-004 Hsieh, Manying hsiehmanying@yahoo.com.tw 2-042 (72) Hsin, Olivia ohsin2002@gmail.com 4-058 (51) Hua, Josephine jhua@uvic.ca 2-056 Huan, Vivien S. vivien.huan@nie.edu.sg 4-064, 4-064, 4-064 Huang, David yhuang@ucla.edu 4-058 (15) Huang, Shi SHuang@med.miami.edu 2-051 Hudak, Cristina M. cristina.hudak@psych.utah.edu 4-044 Hughes-Scalise, Abigail abby.timm@gmail.com 4-023 (49) Huibregtse, Brooke M. huibr005@umn.edu 4-066 Huitsing, Gijs g.e.huitsing@rug.nl 4-072 Huizink, Anja C. a.c.huizink@gmail.com 3-006 (2), 4-042, 4-042, 4-042, 4-042 Humphrey, Regan C. humrc@rhodes.edu 2-005 (58) Hunt, Kate kate@sphsu.mrc.ac.uk 2-054 Hunter, John A. jhunter@psy.otago.ac.nz 4-005 (24) Huntsinger, Carol S. huntsinger@niu.edu 2-042 (28) Hupka-Brunner, Sandra sandra.hupka@unibas.ch 2-022 Hur, Eun Hye eunhyehur@gmail.com 3-044 (60) 146 Hutabaedya, Boonserm boonserm_dv@windowslive.com 2-005 (67) Hwang, Sun Young syhwang87@gmail.com 3-006 (5) Hyde, Janet S. jshyde@wisc.edu 3-024 (61), 4-035, 4-035 Hyde, Luke lwh2@pitt.edu 2-005 (71) Hymel, Shelley shelley.hymel@ubc.ca 2-024 (42), 2-042 (42), 2-042 (69), 2060 (42), 3-024 (30), 3-027, 3-034, 4025, 4-058 (47) Iacono, William wiacono@umn.edu 4-066 Ialongo, Nicholas S. nialongo@jhsph.edu 3-044 (19), 4-017 Iloabachie, Chid c.iloabachie@gmail.com 4-051 Impett, Emily eimpett@gmail.com 4-010, 4-049 Irvine, Alison Alisonklein@sio.midco.net 2-024 (56) Jager-Hyman, Shari sharijh@temple.edu 4-047 Jensen, Alexander C. jensena@purdue.edu 3-051 (14), 4-005 (14), 4-057 Irwin Jr., Charles E. irwinch@peds.ucsf.edu 4-029 Jagers, Rob rjagers@umich.edu 2-024 (75) Jensen, Lene Arnett ljensen@clarku.edu 2-050, 3-006 (9), 3-024 (74), 3-044 (28), 4-023 (6) Isaacs-Corr, Jenny jisaacs@yu.edu 2-060 (44) Jahromi, Laudan B. Laudan.Jahromi@asu.edu 2-029, 2-051, 4-023 (9), 4-041 (81) Isaak, Richelle risaak@sfu.ca 4-023 (75) Jahromi, Parissa Pjahromi@stanford.edu 2-005 (25) Ishikawa, Masayasu masayasu_ishikawa_0220@yahoo.co.jp 2-005 (69) Jain, Umesh umesh_jain@camh.net 3-051 (59) Ittel, Angela angela.ittel@tu-berlin.de 3-017, 3-017, 3-024 (6), 4-045, 4-045 Jakubowski, Karen P. kjakubowski7@gmail.com 3-024 (58) Iturbide, Maria I. miturbide2@unl.edu 3-006 (28) Jalali-Kushki, Yasaman Yasaman.Jalali-Kushki@mail.mcgill.ca 4-058 (22) Iturralde, Esti iturrald@usc.edu 4-005 (48), 4-058 (52) James, Anthony G. agjkbd@mail.missouri.edu 2-005 (78) Iyer, Priya A. iyer@uta.edu 2-002, 2-002 Jamison, Rhonda rjamiso2@illinois.edu 4-058 (1) Ja, Nicole M. nmj8@cornell.edu 3-051 (18), 4-058 (39) Jang, Jisun jang1@bu.edu 4-023 (65) Jackson, Karen M. karendmoran@yahoo.com 3-051 (11), 4-058 (26) Janisse, James jjanis@med.wayne.edu 2-003 Jackson, Theresa E. tjackson@clarku.edu 4-040 Jappe, Leah japp00005@umn.edu 4-073 Jacobs, Janet jacobsjl@colorado.edu 2-029 Jaycox, Lisa lisa_jaycox@rand.org 4-055 Jacobson, Kristen C. kjacobso@bsd.uchicago.edu 2-005 (15), 4-058 (37) Jee, Catherine catherine.jee@gmail.com 2-014 Jagenow, Danilo danilo.jagenow@fu-berlin.de 3-051 (23) Jennings, Jacky M. jjennin1@jhmi.edu 4-023 (36) Jager, Justin jagerjo@mail.nih.gov 2-024 (57) Jennings, Lauren E. lauren.jennings8@gmail.com 4-036 Jensen, Michaeline mjensen5@asu.edu 3-006 (7), 4-058 (23) Jensen-Campbell, Lauri A. lcampbell@uta.edu 2-002, 2-002, 2-002 Jessop, Nadia njessop@ku.edu 3-019 Jewell, Jennifer A. jewell.j.a@gmail.com 4-005 (25) Jhingon, Garima garimajhingon@knights.ucf.edu 4-005 (79) Ji, Eugene eji3@uwo.ca 3-006 (53), 4-041 (77) Ji, Linqin sdjlq@126.com 4-023 (43) Ji, Peter pjiman1@hotmail.com 2-053 147 Jia, Fanli jiafanli@gmail.com 2-005 (13), 2-024 (58) Jiang, Fei hilary4444@yahoo.com 2-060 (28), 2-060 (28) Jimenez, Maria D. maria.jimenez.44@my.csun.edu 4-041 (57) Joe, Sean sjoe@umich.edu 3-028, 4-023 (11), 4-041 (60) Johannes, Elaine ejohanne@ksu.edu 3-044 (18) Johansen, Samantha samantha.johansen@gmail.com 3-006 (25) Johnson, Elizabeth I. ejohns53@utk.edu 4-060, 4-060, 4-060 Jones, Martin H. mhjones3@memphis.edu 2-042 (23) Kalil, Ariel a-kalil@uchicago.edu 2-029, 4-020 Johnson, Jennifer jenniferjohnson089@gmail.com 2-061 Jones, Merrill merrill.jones@aggiemail.usu.edu 2-060 (81), 4-023 (45) Kamper, Kimberly kekamper@buffalo.edu 4-023 (69) Johnson, Lesley E. lej118@psu.edu 3-006 (60) Jones, Shawn C. jonessc@email.unc.edu 2-024 (29) Kan, Marni mkan@rti.org 3-051 (36) Johnson, Michaela mcjohn13@g.holycross.edu 2-060 (38) Jones, Stephanie jonesst@gse.harvard.edu 2-038, 2-053 Kanchewa, Stella skanchewa@gmail.com 4-067 Johnson, Monica K. monikaj@wsu.edu 2-064 Jose, Paul E. paul.jose@vuw.ac.nz 2-042 (28), 2-049, 3-024 (35) Kang, Hannah hkang3@uci.edu 2-005 (28) Johnson, Natalie natjohnson1230@yahoo.com 2-060 (78) Josephson, Wendy w.josephson@uwinnipeg.ca 3-041, 4-023 (44) Kang, Hyeyoung hkang@binghamton.edu 4-056 Johnson, Rebecca beckyj1@stanford.edu 4-062 Joy, Lendi N. lnj5@pitt.edu 3-044 (34) Kang, Hyeyoung hyeyoung913@gmail.com 2-050 Johnson, Sara K. sara.k.johnson@uconn.edu 2-027, 3-006 (67) Juan, Mary Joyce D. maryjoycejuan@gmail.com 4-023 (78), 4-036 Karch, Kathryn M. kmkarch@buffalo.edu 3-006 (73) Johnson-Shelton, Deb debj@ori.org 4-034 Juang, Linda ljuang@sfsu.edu 3-024 (6), 4-045 Karre, Jennifer jxk79@psu.edu 4-061 Johnston, Megan megan.johnston@utoronto.ca 3-051 (73) Jun, Hee-Jin nhhjj@channing.harvard.edu 2-023 Karremans, Johan C. j.karremans@psych.ru.nl 2-014 Jolles, Jelle j.jolles@vu.nl 4-041 (3) Juvonen, Jaana j_juvonen@yahoo.com 2-024 (54), 2-042 (17), 2-060 (26), 3007, 3-051 (47), 4-005 (53) Kashubeck-West, Susan kashubeckwests@umsl.edu 4-041 (65) Joly, Lauren E. ljoly@yorku.ca 4-041 (11) Joly, Melanie melanie.joly@mail.mcgill.ca 4-054, 4-054 Jones, Deborah J. djjones@email.unc.edu 4-023 (10) Jones, Elizabeth P. elizabeth.pufall@tufts.edu 2-039, 4-023 (64) Kaeochinda, Kevin F. kkaeochi@gmail.com 4-011 Kaestle, Christine kaestle@vt.edu 4-005 (36) Kafka, Sarah sarahkafka@hotmail.com 4-005 (24) Kagitcibasi, Cigdem ckagit@ku.edu.tr 3-043, 4-001 Jones, Kenneth R. krjone3@email.uky.edu 3-010 Kataoka, Sabrina sabrina.kataoka@gmail.com 4-023 (17) Katsiaficas, Dalal dalal@nyu.edu 2-042 (61), 3-006 (30), 3-024 (25) Katz, Lynn F. katzlf@u.washington.edu 3-006 (59) Kaufman, Carol E. carol.kaufman@ucdenver.edu 2-015 Kaye, Amy amy.kaye@umit.maine.edu 2-060 (4), 4-005 (57) 148 Kaynak, Övgü okaynak@tresearch.org 4-041 (32) Kelly, Susan skelly@casey.org 2-066 Kiefer, Sarah kiefer@usf.edu 3-002, 3-033, 3-033, 3-051 (84) Kear, Emily ekear@uoguelph.ca 2-060 (7), 3-044 (8) Kendig, Sarah M. skendig@prc.utexas.edu 2-029, 2-029, 3-051 (63) Kiff, Cara cjkiff@u.washington.edu 2-028, 4-035 Kearney, Josephine josephine.Kearney@mq.edu.au 3-006 (13), 4-050 Kennedy, David davidk@rand.org 3-058 Killen, Melanie mkillen@umd.edu 2-070, 3-007, 3-044 (74), 3-051 (3), 4-058 (54), 4-061 Kearns, Peter pok1@geneseo.edu 2-060 (50) Kennedy, Erin K. ekk29@georgetown.edu 4-041 (10) Keefe, Daniel keef0027@umn.edu 4-073 Kepper, Annelies a.s.kepper@uu.nl 3-024 (39) Keenan, Kate kekeenan@uchicago.edu 3-004 Kerig, Patricia p.kerig@psych.utah.edu 3-021, 4-041 (70), 4-044 Keijsers, Loes L.Keijsers@uu.nl 2-042 (14), 3-051 (74), 4-002, 4-005 (75) Kern, Margaret L. mkern@sas.upenn.edu 4-024, 4-024, 4-024 Keiley, Margaret K. keilemk@auburn.edu 4-041 (33) Keller, Anita anita.keller@unibas.ch 2-022 Keller, Heidi hkeller@uni-osnabrueck.de 2-076 Kellerman, Ilana ilana.kellerman@gmail.com 4-058 (44) Kelly, Beth beth.kelly@richmond.edu 2-024 (47) Kelly, Brynn M. bkelly@usc.edu 3-051 (41), 4-005 (41) Kelly, Kate kkelly3589@gmail.com 3-024 (37) Kelly, Meghann L. mlkelly1@crimson.ua.edu 3-006 (4) Kelly, Ryan J. rjk0004@auburn.edu 3-044 (38) Kerpelman, Jennifer L. jkerpelman@auburn.edu 4-041 (66) Kerr, David C. davidk@oslc.org 3-068, 3-068 Killoren, Sarah E. Sarah.Killoren@colostate.edu 3-044 (14) Kilmer, Jason R. jkilmer@uw.edu 2-042 (40) Kim, Hyoun K. hyounk@oslc.org 3-006 (45), 4-004 Kim, Janna jkim@fullerton.edu 2-061, 2-061 Kim, Lena lena.kim@bc.edu 3-006 (48) Kim, May mkim8@nd.edu 2-005 (16), 2-051, 3-051 (29) Kerr, Margaret margaret.kerr@oru.se 3-063, 4-050 Kesselring, Alyx alyxluc@gmail.com 2-024 (60), 2-042 (64) Keyes, Margaret mkeyes@umn.edu 4-066 Khan, Shahriar shahriar.khan@queensu.ca 3-044 (70) Khan, Shereen k_shereen@hotmail.com 3-031 Khurana, Atika akhurana@asc.upenn.edu 2-005 (40) Kiang, Lisa KiangL@wfu.edu 3-006 (81), 3-051 (80) 149 Kim, Su Yeong sykim@prc.utexas.edu 2-060 (54), 4-032 Kim, Sung won kimsung07@gmail.com 3-051 (20) Kim, Taehan tkim33@wisc.edu 2-047 Kim, Tia E. tkim@psu.edu 3-051 (67), 4-041 (68) Kim, Yunhwan kim.2572@buckeyemail.osu.edu 2-024 (66) Kim-Spoon, Jungmeen jungmeen@vt.edu 2-060 (39), 3-006 (78), 3-024 (40), 4041 (4), 4-041 (73) Kimball, Kathryn P. kathrynpkimball@yahoo.com 4-058 (71) Kobak, Roger rkobak@psych.udel.edu 2-042 (63), 3-021, 3-021, 3-044 (61), 4-005 (67) Kimbro, Lawanna lrk200@nyu.edu 3-060 Kliewer, Wendy wkliewer@vcu.edu 2-042 (44), 3-003, 4-005 (18) Kinal, Megan P. mkinal@uwo.ca 3-006 (53), 3-044 (53) Klimes-Dougan, Bonnie klimes@umn.edu 2-060 (71), 4-073 Kindermann, Thomas kindermannt@pdx.edu 4-041 (51) Klimstra, Theo A. theo.klimstra@psy.kuleuven.be 2-005 (74), 2-016, 2-016 Kindt, Karlijn C. k.kindt@pwo.ru.nl 2-042 (59) Klinzing, Hillary J. hklinzing@unomaha.edu 4-023 (68) King, Kevin M. kingkm@u.washington.edu 2-009, 2-009, 4-005 (60), 4-066 Klonksy, David edklonsky@gmail.com 2-008 King, Pamela E. pamking@fuller.edu 4-025 Kloska, Deborah D. ddkloska@isr.umich.edu 2-003 King, Vinetra L. vinetraking@bellsouth.net 2-060 (19), 3-024 (60) Klostermann, Susan sjk108@case.edu 4-023 (49) Kingery, Julie N. kingery@hws.edu 3-006 (46) Klubben, Laura laura.klubben@gmail.com 4-005 (65) Kins, Evie evie.kins@ugent.be 4-013 Klugman, Joshua klugman@temple.edu 3-067 Kirkpatrick Johnson, Monica monicakj@wsu.edu 4-020, 4-020 Knack, Jennifer M. jknack@clarkson.edu 2-002, 2-002 Kirmayer, Miriam miriam.kirmayer@mail.mcgill.ca 4-005 (52), 4-023 (77) Knifsend, Casey A. cknifsend@ucla.edu 2-042 (17), 2-060 (17) Kirshner, Ben ben.kirshner@colorado.edu 2-013, 4-002.5 Knight, George P. george.knight@asu.edu 2-005 (54), 2-024 (27), 2-024 (28), 2077, 3-030, 4-058 (12) Koordeman, Renske r.koordeman@bsi.ru.nl 2-054, 2-054 Knoble, Naomi B. naomik@uoregon.edu 3-006 (45), 4-057 Koot, Hans M. j.m.koot@vu.nl 2-042 (14) Knott, Briauna briaunak@uab.edu 3-024 (60) Kopko, Kimberly kak33@cornell.edu 2-005 (12) Knowlton, Brooke brooke.knowlton@hotmail.com 2-005 (26) Korchmaros, Josephine josephine@is4k.com 2-035, 2-035 Kissling, Elizabeth A. ekissling@ewu.edu 4-040 Kiuru, Noona noona.h.kiuru@jyu.fi 4-005 (46), 4-014 Kivisto, Katherine L. Katie_Kivisto@brown.edu 2-067, 3-006 (70), 3-024 (54), 3-051 (57), 3-059, 4-023 (56) Kleinjan, Marloes m.kleinjan@bsi.ru.nl 2-065, 3-051 (38) 150 Kochel, Karen P. karen.kochel@asu.edu 2-005 (79), 2-060 (46), 2-060 (53) Koenig, Brian W. bwkoenig@k12associates.com 3-010.5 Koestner, Richard richard.koestner@mcgill.ca 2-042 (57) Kohlberger, Brittany bkohl@wayne.edu 3-006 (55), 4-070 Kohm, Amelia akohm@uchicago.edu 2-060 (41) Kolaczyk, Eric kolaczyk@bu.edu 4-023 (65) Koller, Silvia silviakoller@gmail.com 2-047, 3-043 Komes, Jessica jessica.komes@uni-jena.de 3-035 Komro, Kelli A. kak@ichp.ufl.edu 2-060 (83) Konigstedt, Martina ceuta@psi.uminho.pt 3-035 Kornbluh, Mariah mkornblu@gmail.com 2-013, 3-044 (26) Krishnakumar, Ambika akrish@syr.edu 4-041 (38) Kuykendoll, Megan taylormk@muohio.edu 2-042 (30) Kornienko, Olga olga.kornienko@asu.edu 3-006 (51) Kropczynski, Jessica jess.kropczynski@gmail.com 4-005 (15) Kwon, Faith faithkwon@gmail.com 2-060 (12) Korogodsky, Maria mbp28@wildcats.unh.edu 3-051 (64) Kruel, Cristina S. cristinask@terra.com.br 4-023 (15) La Greca, Annette M. alagreca@miami.edu 2-005 (43), 2-005 (44), 2-024 (43), 2042 (43), 4-058 (51) Kosch, Calli calliev.kosch@bc.edu 3-006 (48) Krygsman, Amanda akryg076@uottawa.ca 2-002, 2-024 (42), 3-044 (41) Kosciw, Joseph G. jkosciw@glsen.org 2-035, 3-012, 3-061, 4-052 Kull, Ryan rkull@glsen.org 4-052 Kosdon, Sari smkosdon@my.csun.edu 3-044 (48) Kumar, Revathy revathy.kumar@utoledo.edu 2-060 (27) Kotchick, Beth bakotchick@loyola.edu 3-044 (44), 3-051 (43), 4-041 (42), 4041 (43) Kunimatsu, Melissa M. mmkunima@uno.edu 3-006 (68), 3-044 (2), 3-044 (69) Koziol, Tom tkoziol@unomaha.edu 4-005 (54) Krabbendam, Lydia l.krabbendam@vu.nl 4-041 (3) Kracke, Baerbel baerbel.kracke@uni-erfurt.de 3-035, 3-035 Krafchick, Jen Jen.Krafchick@colostate.edu 3-044 (65) Kreager, Derek dak27@psu.edu 4-010 Kretsch, Natalie natalie.kretsch@gmail.com 2-005 (48), 2-042 (19), 2-060 (51) Kretschmer, Tina tina.kretschmer@kcl.ac.uk 2-065, 3-024 (1) Krettenauer, Tobias tkrettenauer@wlu.ca 2-033, 2-033 Krieg, Dana B. kriegd@kenyon.edu 3-024 (80) LaBelle, Denise R. denise.labelle@temple.edu 2-036, 3-051 (1) LaChapelle, Alicia alicia.lachapelle@gmail.com 2-042 (25) Kuntsche, Emmanuel ekuntsche@addiction-info.ch 2-054 Kuntz, Kayla kuntzka@mnstate.edu 3-022 Kunz, Jennifer H. jennifer.kunz@rosalindfranklin.edu 3-024 (31) Kuo, Sally I. kuoxx053@umn.edu 2-074, 4-058 (58) Kuperminc, Gabriel P. gkuperminc@gsu.edu 2-066, 4-008, 4-046, 4-046 Kurapati, Nikhil kurapatin@upmc.edu 2-030 Kurtz-Costes, Beth bkcostes@email.unc.edu 2-024 (22), 4-018, 4-023 (29) Kushi, Lawrence Larry.Kushi@kp.org 2-024 (2) Kuwabara, Chiaki kuwabara@hcs.tsukuba.ac.jp 2-005 (69) 151 Lacroux, Ivan O. proyectos@demysex.org.mx 3-014 Lacy, Ryan T. rtlacy@gmail.com 3-024 (80) Ladd, Gary W. gary.ladd@asu.edu 2-042 (53) Lafavor, Theresa L. lafa0017@umn.edu 2-060 (10) Lafferty, Kristina M. klaffert@uvm.edu 3-006 (50) Lafko, Nicole nlafko@uvm.edu 2-005 (68), 3-006 (50) Lagattuta, Kristin H. khlaga@ucdavis.edu 2-018 Laghi, Fiorenzo fiorenzo.laghi@uniroma1.it 2-005 (47), 3-024 (47) Lai, Betty bettylai10@yahoo.com 2-005 (44), 2-042 (43) Laible, Deborah J. del205@lehigh.edu 2-018, 3-051 (76), 4-012, 4-023 (72) Laitner, Christina claitner@gmail.com 3-044 (4) Lansing, Jiffy jlansing@chapinhall.org 3-018 Laska, Melissa N. mnlaska@umn.edu 3-044 (35) Lalonde, Christopher E. lalonde@uvic.ca 2-058 Lansu, Tessa A. t.lansu@psych.ru.nl 2-014, 3-044 (43) Lassiter, Ann Mills amlassit@gmail.com 4-016 Lalonde, Gabrielle gabrielle.lalonde@hotmail.com 2-060 (2) Lanteigne, Dianna dianna.lanteigne@queensu.ca 2-024 (71), 3-006 (72), 4-003, 4-003 Lau, Anna alau@psych.ucla.edu 2-060 (29) Lam, Chun Bun cxl445@psu.edu 3-044 (63), 4-056 Lanthier, Richard lanthier@gwu.edu 2-005 (60), 3-024 (14) Lau, Katherine S. klau@my.uno.edu 3-006 (68), 3-044 (69) Lam, Hoa T. hlam1020@gmail.com 4-023 (82) Lanz, Margherita margherita.lanz@unicatt.it 4-058 (9) Lau, Yat Laam alfredy.lau@gmail.com 3-006 (74) Lambert, Kerrylin kerrylin.lambert@unc.edu 3-024 (23) Lanza, H. Isabella hilanza@ucla.edu 4-058 (15) Laurent, Heidemarie hlaurent@uwyo.edu 3-024 (55), 3-044 (55), 3-051 (55) Lambert, Sharon F. sfmlambert@gmail.com 3-024 (15), 3-044 (15), 3-044 (19) Lapre, Genevieve E. glapre@my.uno.edu 3-006 (68) Lamborn, Susie D. slamborn@uwm.edu 3-051 (27) Lapsley, Daniel danlapsley@nd.edu 2-005 (3), 2-018, 2-024 (20), 2-024 (34), 4-005 (62), 4-013, 4-013 Laursen, Brett laursen@fau.edu 2-060 (33), 3-024 (4), 3-044 (5), 3-044 (46), 3-051 (48), 4-005 (46), 4-014, 4029 Lamis, Dorian A. Dalamis@gmail.com 4-041 (31) Landoll, Ryan R. r.landoll@umiami.edu 2-024 (43), 3-012, 4-029 Landor, Antoinette M. alandor@uga.edu 2-024 (36) Laney, Tyler laneyt@spu.edu 2-036 Langdon, Su slangdon@bates.edu 4-058 (60) Langenkamp, Amy G. alangenk@nd.edu 3-030 Langlais, Michael R. mickey.langlais@gmail.com 3-024 (54) Langlois, Judith H. langlois@mail.utexas.edu 3-006 (76) Lara-Cinisomo, Sandraluz Sandraluz_Lara-Cinisomo@rand.org 4-055 Larkby, Cynthia larkby@pitt.edu 2-017 LaVoie, Joseph C. jclavoie@unomaha.edu 3-006 (43) Law, Danielle M. dalaw@interchange.ubc.ca 3-031 Law, Jennifer M. miss.tootyfluty@gmail.com 4-058 (6) Larose, Simon simon.larose@fse.ulaval.ca 4-041 (20) Larsen, Helle h.larsen@uva.nl 4-042 Larson, Nicholas nicholas.larson@mail.wvu.edu 2-049 Larson, Reed larsonr@illinois.edu 2-013, 2-050, 2-063, 3-024 (18), 3-044 (72) Lawford, Heather L. hlawford@gmail.com 2-005 (18) Lawler, Jamie lawle084@umn.edu 3-044 (56) Lawrence, Breanna breanna@uvic.ca 4-058 (67) Lawrence, Edith C. ecl2t@Virginia.EDU 2-071, 4-008 Larstone, Roseann larstone@interchange.ubc.ca 2-042 (69) Laws, Shakari shakarilaws23@yahoo.com 2-005 (75) Larzelere, Robert robert.larzelere@okstate.edu 3-006 (27) Lax, Rachael rachael.lax@rochester.edu 2-005 (73), 4-023 (61) 152 Lay, Keng-Ling kllay@ntu.edu.tw 2-042 (80) Ledwell, Maggie mxl991@psu.edu 4-005 (43) Lee, Richard M. richlee@umn.edu 2-051, 2-051 Laye-Gindhu, Aviva am.laye@gmail.com 4-015 Lee, Bethany R. blee@ssw.umaryland.edu 3-006 (6) Lee, Tae Kyoung ltk501@uga.edu 3-006 (62) Layfield, Carly carly.layfield@gmail.com 3-051 (53) Lee, Bora blee@neoucom.edu 3-035 Lee, Zina Zina.Lee@ufv.ca 4-023 (75) Lazarevic, Vanja vlazare2@illinois.edu 2-024 (65), 2-056, 2-056 Lee, Catherine clee5@luc.edu 2-060 (60) Lee Williams, Joanna jml4bw@Virginia.EDU 2-071, 4-041 (49) Lazarides, Rebecca rebecca.lazarides@tu-berlin.de 3-017 Lee, Chien-Ti chienti.lee@aggiemail.usu.edu 4-023 (30) Lees, Danielle DanielleL@psycare.com.au 2-044 Lazzaretti, Ana P. anapaula.lazzaretti@gmail.com 2-047 Lee, Christine M. leecm@uw.edu 2-005 (33), 2-042 (40) Lefkowitz, Eva S. EXL20@psu.edu 2-017, 2-041, 3-024 (37), 3-059, 3059, 4-005 (37), 4-010 Le, Benjamin ble@haverford.edu 3-051 (53) Lee, Clinton C. cclee@ucdavis.edu 2-030, 2-042 (1), 3-051 (49) Le, Thao N. thaole3@hawaii.edu 4-005 (34) Lee, Daniel leedanb@unc.edu 2-060 (63) Le, Thao tle@cahs.colostate.edu 3-006 (25) Lee, Diane S. leediane@stanford.edu 3-062 Le Grange, Daniel legrange@uchicago.edu 3-024 (45) Lee, Ihno A. ilee@ku.edu 4-069 Le Menestrel, Suzanne slemenestrel@nifa.usda.gov 2-006 (G2), 3-010, 3-042, 3-046, 3-057 Lee, Jung Yeon jungyeon.lee@nyumc.org 4-023 (39), 4-023 (81) Leach, Lesley F. lleach@austin.utexas.edu 3-051 (2) Lee, Kang kang.lee@utoronto.ca 3-006 (74) Leadbeater, Bonnie J. bleadbea@uvic.ca 2-005 (27), 2-071, 3-006 (34), 3-024 (22), 3-024 (42), 3-041, 3-044 (64), 4053, 4-053 Lee, Kyung Hwa khl3@pitt.edu 2-030 Leaper, Campbell cam@ucsc.edu 4-023 (25), 4-058 (50) LeBouthillier, Daniel M. Daniel.LeBouthillier@unb.ca 2-042 (36) Ledingham, Jane jane.ledingham@uottawa.ca 2-042 (41), 3-006 (71), 4-023 (12) Leigh, Barbara C. leigh@uw.edu 2-005 (33) Leiter, Valerie valerie.leiter@simmons.edu 3-045.5 Lejeuz, Carl W. clejeuz@umd.edu 2-055, 4-031, 4-031 Lemerise, Elizabeth Elizabeth.Lemerise@wku.edu 3-033 Lee, Matthew mdaniellee@gmail.com 2-060 (42), 3-027 Lee, Meery MeeryL@knsu.ac.kr 4-058 (76) Lee, Nikki n.c.lee@vu.nl 4-041 (3) Lengua, Liliana J. liliana@u.washington.edu 2-028, 2-060 (32), 3-024 (32), 3-024 (33), 3-024 (63), 4-023 (51), 4-035 Lento, Rene rlento@gmail.com 2-042 (37) Leonard, Noelle R. nrl4@nyu.edu 3-044 (4), 4-023 (37) Lepore, Stephen J. slepore@temple.edu 3-003, 4-005 (18) Lequertier, Belinda b.lequertier@uq.edu.au 4-041 (64) Lerner, Jacqueline lerner@bc.edu 3-024 (13) 153 Lerner, Richard M. richard.lerner@tufts.edu 3-024 (10), 3-054, 4-023 (38), 4-041 (76) Lero, Donna dlero@uoguelph.ca 2-024 (8) Lessard, Valerie valerie.lessard@fse.ulaval.ca 4-041 (20) LeTard, Amanda J. amanda.letard@uconn.edu 4-023 (46), 4-041 (71), 4-058 (49) Leve, Leslie lesliel@oslc.org 3-026, 3-051 (5), 3-068 Leventhal, Tama tama.leventhal@tufts.edu 2-060 (15), 3-006 (15) Levi, Gil gillevigil@gmail.com 2-046 Levin, Elizabeth elevin@laurentian.ca 2-060 (22) Levine Coley, Rebekah coleyre@bc.edu 2-011, 4-005 (33) Lewin-Bizan, Selva lewinbiz@gmail.com 3-024 (10) Lewis, Gemma LewisG16@cardiff.ac.uk 3-009 Lewis, Kendra lewiske@onid.orst.edu 2-053 Li, Yibing yibing.li@gmail.com 2-060 (15), 4-023 (38) Linn, Rebekah linnrj@goldmail.etsu.edu 4-060 Liang, Belle liangbe@bc.edu 4-041 (63) Lippe, Tanja V. t.vanderlippe@uu.nl 2-022 Liao, Hsiao-Wen liao.swen@gmai.com 3-024 (68), 4-041 (41) Lippman, Angie angielippman@me.com 3-044 (62) Lichtenstein, Paul Paul.Lichtenstein@ki.se 3-009 Lippold, Melissa melissalippold@yahoo.com 2-055, 3-044 (7) Lichtwarck-Aschoff, Anna a.lichtwarck-aschoff@pwo.ru.nl 4-005 (32), 4-023 (32) Little, Todd yhat@ku.edu 1-002, 2-005 (65), 2-042 (45), 3-043, 3-064 Licona, Adela aclicona@email.arizona.edu 3-014 Lieberman, Matt lieber@ucla.edu 2-025 Light, John M. jlight@ori.org 3-058, 3-058, 4-034 Lim, Kelvin O. kolim@umn.edu 4-073 Liu, Dong dliu24@wisc.edu 4-005 (83) Liu, Jianjun jianjundoc@gmail.com 4-023 (38) Liu, Lisa lisa.liu2@gmail.com 2-060 (29) Liu, Richard T. rliu@temple.edu 3-051 (1), 3-067, 4-047 Lin, Elizabeth Y. liz.lin@gmail.com 4-005 (13) Liu, Weiwei weliu@jhsph.edu 4-017 Lin, Emily S. es.lin@tufts.edu 2-039 Livingston, Jennifer livingst@ria.buffalo.edu 3-051 (44) Lin, Lin linlin.lilian@gmail.com 3-006 (24) Livneh, Yaara yaara.livneh@gmail.com 2-074 Lewis, Stephen P. stephen.lewis@uoguelph.ca 2-005 (80) Lindahl, Kristin kristin.lindahl@gmail.com 2-052, 2-052, 2-052, 3-044 (82), 4-023 (82), 4-044 Llewellyn, Nicole nllewell@illinois.edu 3-026 Li, Hao cngzyt@126.com 2-005 (63) Lindenberg, Siegwart s.m.lindenberg@rug.nl 4-023 (50) Lochman, John E. jlochman@as.ua.edu 3-006 (4), 4-004, 4-041 (31) Li, Shengnan shengnanli2010@knights.ucf.edu 4-005 (79) Linder, Jennifer R. jlinder@linfield.edu 4-023 (84) Loeb, Emiy emily.loeb@rochester.edu 2-042 (56) Li, Yan yli34@depaul.edu 2-024 (41), 2-042 (8), 2-042 (48), 2060 (43), 3-031, 3-044 (50) Lindsey, Michael mlindsey@ssw.umaryland.edu 3-028 154 Loeber, Rolf loeberr@upmc.edu 4-005 (68) Loseman, Annemarie A.Loseman@uu.nl. 3-040 Luecken, Linda lluecke@asu.edu 3-052 Logan, Diane logande@uw.edu 2-042 (40) Lotan, Gurit glotan@videotron.ca 4-058 (22) Luk, Jeremy W. jwluk@uw.edu 4-005 (60), 4-066 Logan, Jillian Jillian.logan@usd.edu 2-024 (56) Lott, Ryan E. rel0015@auburn.edu 3-044 (59) Lunkenheimer, Erika erika.lunkenheimer@colostate.edu 4-005 (9), 4-030 Logis, Handrea hlogis2@illinois.edu 2-038 Lougheed, Jessica j.lougheed@queensu.ca 4-003, 4-003, 4-023 (71) Luo, Feijun hto1@cdc.gov 2-072 Lohman, Brenda J. blohman@iastate.edu 3-006 (10), 4-004, 4-004 Loukas, Alexandra alexandra.loukas@mail.utexas.edu 2-042 (35), 4-005 (12), 4-012, 4-023 (41) Luo, Tana tana.luo@gmail.com 2-055 Loiselle, Catherine catherine.loiselle@mail.mcgill.ca 4-058 (22) Lovegrove, Peter pjl7e@Virginia.EDU 2-034, 3-004 Lollis, Susan slollis@uoguelph.ca 2-024 (8), 2-060 (7), 3-044 (8), 4-023 (7) Loving, Timothy J. tjloving@mail.utexas.edu 3-051 (53) Lombadi, Caitlin mcpherrc@bc.edu 4-005 (33) Low, Sabina sabina.low@wichita.edu 3-022, 4-044 Longo, Gregory S. glongo@vt.edu 2-060 (39), 3-006 (78), 3-024 (76), 4041 (73) Lowe, Sarah R. srlowe@gmail.com 3-024 (64), 4-067 Loomis, Colleen cloomis@wlu.ca 3-006 (66) Lopez, Luz-Stella lfernan@metrotel.net.co 2-075, 4-023 (27) Lopez, Vera vera.lopez@asu.edu 2-024 (38), 2-060 (35) Lopez-Tello, Gisselle gi1504@gmail.com 4-041 (12) Lopez-Vergara, Hector I. hilopez2@buffalo.edu 2-005 (31), 2-060 (32), 3-006 (73), 3044 (58) Lorenz, Frederick O. folorenz@iastate.edu 3-006 (62), 4-038, 4-038, 4-038 Lorenzo-Blanco, Elma elmalb@umich.edu 2-051 Luo, Tingchen 101909138@qq.com 4-041 (61), 4-058 (64) Luo, Weifan luoweifan1112@yahoo.cn 4-041 (61) Luthar, Suniya suniya.luthar@columbia.edu 4-011 Luu, Jason luuj0@wfu.edu 3-051 (80) Luyckx, Koen koen.luyckx@psy.kuleuven.be 2-016 Lozano, Briana ihj0@cdc.gov 2-072 Lucas-Thompson, Rachel G. rlucasth@macalester.edu 2-024 (59), 2-060 (12) Lynn, Justin T. [jtlynn@csu.fullerton.edu] 4-041 (36) Lyon, Aaron lyona@uw.edu 2-034 Luckner, Amy aluckner@niu.edu 2-005 (50) Ludden, Alison B. aludden@holycross.edu 2-060 (38), 4-023 (23), 4-058 (19) Ludlow, Tracy T.Ludlow@griffith.edu.au 3-006 (63), 3-024 (57) Lyon, Stephanie J. stephanie.j.lyon@gmail.com 2-024 (82) Lyons, John john.lyons@uottawa.ca 2-005 (59) Löfgren, Malin malin.lofgren0043@stud.hkr.se 3-024 (73) Ludwig, Kristy ludwik@uw.edu 4-005 (58) Luebbe, Aaron M. luebbea2@muohio.edu 3-051 (77) 155 Ma, Ping pma@tulane.edu 4-005 (28) Ma, Ting-Lan tma3@wisc.edu 3-006 (42) Mahalingam, Ramaswami ramawasi@umich.edu 3-025 Malm, Esther N. emalm1@student.gsu.edu 4-005 (10) Ma, Yanling yanlima@tigermail.auburn.edu 4-041 (66) Maher, Erin emaher@casey.org 2-066 Malone, Patrick S. malone.ps@gmail.com 4-041 (31) Maas, Megan K. mkm266@psu.edu 4-005 (37) Mahmud, Aida aida.mahmud.22@my.csun.edu 4-041 (18) Malti, Tina tina.malti@utoronto.ca 2-024 (76), 2-033, 2-070, 4-025 Macapagal, Ma. Elizabeth mmacapagal@ateneo.edu 4-005 (42) Maholmes, Valerie maholmev@mail.nih.gov 2-006 (G5), 3-042, 3-047 Manago, Adriana aamanago@ucla.edu 4-023 (28) Macek, Petr macek@fss.muni.cz 2-027, 4-058 (27) Mahoney, Joseph L. joseph.mahoney@uci.edu 2-068, 3-044 (16), 4-056 Mancini, Jay mancini@uga.edu 4-055 MacEvoy, Julie P. julie.macevoy.1@bc.edu 3-006 (48), 3-006 (57) Main, Alexandra amain@berkeley.edu 2-042 (49) Mandara, Jelani j-mandara@northwestern.edu 2-005 (81), 2-059 MacIntyre, Leslie y9skq@unb.ca 4-058 (59) Major-Wilson, Hanna hmajor@med.miami.edu 4-058 (51) Mann, Liesbeth L.Mann@uva.nl 3-040 MacLean, Michael macleamg@buffalostate.edu 2-024 (32) Mak, Florence W. florencew.mak@gmail.com 3-051 (71) Manning, Nell nnm3k@virginia.edu 2-042 (55) MacPherson, Laura lmacpherson@psyc.umd.edu 4-031 Makariev, Drika W. dmakariev@ucdavis.edu 2-018, 2-018 Manolis, Alexandra amanolis@luc.edu 3-051 (19) MacTavish, Angele amactavi@uoguelph.ca 3-024 (44), 4-005 (69) Makin-Byrd, Kerry Kerry.makin.byrd@gmail.com 4-004 Mansell, Warren warren.mansell@manchester.ac.uk 4-047 Madigan, Amy amy.madigan@hhs.gov 2-042 (7) Malanchuk, Oksana oksana@umich.edu 3-044 (29), 4-033, 4-033 Mansfield, Cade D. cade.mansfield@psych.utah.edu 4-036 Madkour, Aubrey S. aspriggs@tulane.edu 4-005 (28) Malik, Bijaya K. bijayancert@gmail.com 2-042 (20) Marbell, Kristine kmarbell@clarku.edu 3-028, 4-041 (74) Madsen, Stephanie D. smadsen@mcdaniel.edu 3-006 (22) Malik, Neena neenammalik@gmail.com 2-052, 2-052, 2-052, 3-044 (82), 4-023 (82), 4-044 Marceau, Kristine kpm170@psu.edu 2-012, 2-012 Maggs, Jennifer jmaggs@psu.edu 2-003, 2-017, 3-044 (17), 3-059 Magner, Katherine kat_magner@hotmail.com 3-024 (48) Mahalik, James james.mahalik@bc.edu 4-005 (33) Maliken, Ashley C. amaliken@u.washington.edu 3-006 (59) Malinauskiene, Oksana omalinauskiene@gmail.com 2-024 (50) Malloy, Margaret malloym@onid.orst.edu 2-053 156 Marco, Christine cmarco@ric.edu 2-060 (38) Marcynyszyn, Lyscha lmarcynyszyn@casey.org 2-066, 2-066 Mares, Suzanne s.maers@pwo.ru.nl 4-005 (32), 4-023 (32) Margolin, Gayla margolin@usc.edu 2-024 (64), 2-024 (72), 2-060 (65), 4005 (19), 4-005 (48), 4-041 (5), 4-058 (44), 4-058 (52) Mariano, Jenni M. jmmariano@sar.usf.edu 2-060 (28), 4-048, 4-048 Marion, Donna dmarion@fau.edu 3-044 (46), 4-005 (46) Markey, Charlotte N. chmarkey@camden.rutgers.edu 4-058 (36) Markman, Barry S. b.markman@wayne.edu 2-005 (37) Marko-Holguin, Monika mmarko@uic.edu 4-051 Marks, Peter E. mark0395@umn.edu 2-075 Marks, Peter pmarks@reed.edu 4-054 Markstrom, Carol A. carol.markstrom@mail.wvu.edu 2-021, 2-060 (36), 4-058 (31) Marmorstein, Naomi marmorst@camden.rutgers.edu 4-005 (40) Mars, Dustin E. dmars@tulane.edu 4-058 (35) Marschall-Lévesque, Shawn shawn.marschalllevesque@umontreal.ca 3-006 (39) Marsee, Monica A. mmarsee@uno.edu 3-006 (68), 3-044 (2), 3-044 (69) Marshal, Michael P. marshalmp@upmc.edu 2-023, 2-023, 2-023, 4-041 (82) Marshall, Anne amarshal@uvic.ca 4-058 (67) Marshall, Sheila K. Sheila.Marshall@ubc.ca 2-060 (7), 3-044 (8), 4-005 (3), 4-005 (65), 4-023 (3), 4-023 (7), 4-050 Marta, Elena elena.marta@unicatt.it 2-005 (30), 2-060 (24) Martin, Anne arm53@columbia.edu 2-005 (11) Martin, Carol L. cmartin@asu.edu 2-005 (79), 2-060 (53), 3-025.5 Martinez, Michael E. memartin@uci.edu 3-006 (3) Martz, Meghan meghan.e.martz@gmail.com 4-007 Marvan, Ma. Luisa mlmarvan@gmail.com 4-040 Marzana, Daniela daniela.marzana@unicatt.it 2-060 (24) Masarik, April S. ansanders@ucdavis.edu 4-038 Martin, Carol C. cmartin@asu.edu 3-043 Martin, David M. mart1776@umn.edu 3-051 (5) Martin, Graham E. g.martin@uq.edu.au 2-008, 4-015, 4-041 (64) Martin, Laurie laurie_martin@rand.org 4-055 Martin, Monica J. monmartin@ucdavis.edu 4-038, 4-071 Martin, Nina nina.c.martin@vanderbilt.edu 4-051 Martin, Pamela pmarti10@nccu.edu 3-060 Martin, Sophie A. smartin@voicematters.com.au 4-041 (64) Martin, Thomas thomas_martin1@web.de 2-027, 4-041 (24) Martin-Storey, Alexa alexa.martin@gmail.com 2-042 (82), 3-051 (63), 3-061, 3-061, 4-023 (79) Martinez, Brynheld br_m@education.concordia.ca 4-041 (13), 4-058 (16) Martinez, M. Loreto mlmartig@uc.cl 3-005, 3-020, 4-033 157 Masche, J. Gowert gowert.masche@hkr.se 3-024 (73) Masini, Olivia osm88@comcast.net 2-034 Maslowsky, Julie jmaslow@umich.edu 2-003, 2-003, 4-007 Mason, Erin P. epmason@wayne.edu 3-006 (55) Mason-Singh, Amanda ammason@umd.edu 2-077 Massoud, Chelsea cmassoud@usc.edu 4-041 (5), 4-058 (44) Masters, Brooke Brooke.M.Masters@wv.gov 2-060 (36) Masyn, Katherine katherine_masyn@gse.harvard.edu 2-023, 4-038 Mathieson, Lindsay mathi137@umn.edu 2-060 (45) Mathys, Cecile cecile.mathys@ulg.ac.be 3-036 Matjasko, Jennifer hto9@cdc.gov 2-072 Matsuba, Kyle kyle.matsuba@kwantlen.net 2-024 (33), 4-037 Matsuba, M. K. kyle.matsuba@kwantlen.ca 3-038 Matt, Lindsey lmatt@temple.edu 3-051 (1), 4-047 Mattis, Jacqueline S. jacqueline.mattis@nyu.edu 3-060, 3-060, 3-060 Maturo, Donna dmaturo@med.miami.edu 4-058 (51) Maughan, Barbara barbara.maughan@kcl.ac.uk 3-024 (1), 3-024 (70) Maxwell, Allison maxwell.allison.e@gmail.com 2-024 (64) Mayeux, Lara lmayeux@ou.edu 3-024 (50), 4-005 (45), 4-054 Mayman, Shari B. SMayman@cheo.on.ca 2-075, 4-023 (27) Maynard, Douglas maynardd@newpaltz.edu 2-042 (79) Mayseless, Ofra ofram@edu.haifa.ac.il 3-005 Mazza, James mazza@uw.edu 2-005 (61) Mazzulla, Emily C. emazzull@uvm.edu 3-051 (52) McAdams, Tom tom.mcadams@kcl.ac.uk 3-024 (70), 4-041 (34) McBroom, KrisAnn A. krisann.mcbroom@gmail.com 2-024 (4), 2-042 (4), 3-051 (69) McCarty, Carolyn A. cmccarty@u.washington.edu 2-009, 3-044 (39) McCauley, Elizabeth eliz@u.washington.edu 2-009, 2-036, 3-044 (39), 3-068, 4-041 (59), 4-005 (58), 4-035, 4-035 McClelland, Sara saramcc@umich.edu 3-049 McCormack, Mark mark.mccormack@brunel.ac.uk 3-051 (81), 4-005 (82) McCuaig Edge, Heather heather.mccuaig.edge@queensu.ca 2-024 (44) McCutcheon, Michael J. mjm725@nyu.edu 2-060 (82) McDaniel, Dawn ddmcdani@usc.edu 3-024 (34) McDonald, Kristina L. klmcdonald2@ua.edu 4-027 McDonough, Jennifer jltodd@vcu.edu 4-005 (26) McDougall, Patricia pmcdougall@stmcollege.ca 2-002, 2-024 (42), 2-042 (42), 3-022, 3-022, 3-044 (41), 4-005 (61) McElwain, Alyssa azm0046@tigermail.auburn.edu 4-041 (66) McGinley, Meredith mmcginley@chatham.edu 2-033, 3-044 (76), 3-044 (78), 3-060, 3-060, 3-060 McGue, Matt mcgue001@umn.edu 4-066 McGuire, Jenifer jkmcguire@cahnrs.wsu.edu 2-005 (83), 2-024 (79) McGuire, Jessica E. jessica.e.mcguire@gmail.com 2-060 (48), 4-058 (50) McGuire, Shirley mcguire@usfca.edu 3-009 158 McHale, Susan x2u@psu.edu 2-005 (7), 2-060 (14), 3-044 (14), 3044 (63), 3-051 (28), 4-056, 4-057 McInnis, Shannahn Shannahn.McInnis@mail.mcgill.ca 4-058 (22) McIntyre, Teneisha V. neisha205@gmail.com 4-058 (38) McKeever, Mary maryoneillmckeever@gmail.com 2-005 (3), 4-005 (62) McKelvey, Lorraine M. mckelveylorraine@uams.edu 4-058 (7), 4-058 (17) McKenzie, Jessica jemckenzie@clarku.edu 3-024 (74) McKeown, Catherine A. h88pp@unb.ca 4-005 (6) McLaughlin, Heather mclau137@umn.edu 4-020 McLaughlin, Katie A. katie.mclaughlin@childrens.harvard.edu 2-009 McLean, Kate C. Kate.McLean@wwu.edu 2-019, 3-044 (79), 4-013, 4-036, 4-058 (82) McLoyd, Vonnie vcmcloyd@umich.edu 2-041, 3-006 (38), 3-024 (38), 4-062 McMahon, Robert rjmcmaho@sfu.ca 3-051 (9), 3-051 (12), 4-004, 4-005 (60), 4-066 McMakin, Dana L. mcmakind@upmc.edu 2-030 McNall, Miles mcnall@msu.edu 4-023 (8) McNeely, Clea cmcneely@utk.edu 3-030 McWhirter, Benedict T. benmcw@uoregon.edu 2-024 (13), 2-042 (12) Merchant, Christopher R. c-merchant@neiu.edu 3-006 (61) Miga, Erin erinmiga@gmail.com 2-042 (55), 4-041 (71) McWhirter, Ellen ellenmcw@uoregon.edu 2-024 (13) Merlin, Simone smerlin@students.unibe.ch 3-027 Milan, Stephanie stephanie.milan@uconn.edu 2-042 (26) Mebert, Carolyn J. cjm@cisunix.unh.edu 4-041 (28) Merrill, Natalie Natalie.merrill@emory.edu 2-019 Milano, Alessia alessia.s.milano@gmail.com 2-024 (71) Medvide, Mary Beth Medvide@bc.edu 2-069, 2-069 Merten, Michael michael.merten@okstate.edu 2-024 (10), 4-041 (23), 4-058 (40) Miles, Sarah sarah.miles@stanford.edu 2-024 (21) Meeus, Wim H. w.meeus@uu.nl 2-016, 2-016, 2-016, 2-024 (73), 2-042 (14), 2-042 (50), 2-042 (58), 3-044 (49), 3-051 (74), 4-005 (75), 4-012, 4030, 4-041 (72) Mesurado, Belén mesuradob@gmail.com 2-005 (54), 4-058 (56) Miller, Adam adambryantmiller@gmail.com 3-051 (40) Meter, Diana J. djmeter@email.arizona.edu 2-060 (47) Miller, Cindy F. cindy.f.miller@asu.edu 2-005 (79), 2-060 (53) Metz, Allison ametz@ufl.edu 4-041 (44) Miller, Elizabeth elizabeth.miller@chp.edu 4-041 (56) Metzger, Aaron Aaron.Metzger@mail.wvu.edu 3-051 (24), 4-041 (16) Miller, Erica emm2182@columbia.edu 3-024 (51) Metzger, Isha W. isha.metzger@gmail.com 4-005 (20) Miller, Kathleen kmiller@ria.buffalo.edu 3-051 (44) Meyer, Felicia f_Meyer@alcor.concordia.ca 2-005 (52), 4-023 (68) Millls, Laura laura.m@pineriverinstitute.com 2-042 (66) Mello, Zena R. zmello@uccs.edu 2-005 (4), 2-024 (4), 2-042 (4), 3-051 (69) Meyer, Thomas thomas.meyer@unibas.ch 2-022 Millsap, Roger millsap@asu.edu 3-006 (7) Mendle, Jane jem482@cornell.edu 3-026 Meyers, Kathleen kmeyers@tresearch.org 4-041 (32) Minor, Kelly kellyminor20@gmail.com 4-018 Menna, Rosanne rmenna@uwindsor.ca 3-024 (45) Meyerson, David A. dmeyerso@depaul.edu 2-020, 2-028 Mireles-Rios, Rebeca rmireles@education.ucsb.edu 2-005 (34), 4-041 (12) Mennen, Ferol mennen@usc.edu 2-048 Mezulis, Amy mezulis@spu.edu 2-036, 2-036, 2-042 (84), 2-060 (59), 3-034, 4-023 (58), 4-035 Mistry, Rashmita S. mistry@gseis.ucla.edu 3-044 (24), 4-032, 4-032, 4-058 (83), 4-062 Middaugh, Ellen emiddaug@mills.edu 2-042 (10) Mitchell, Christina christina.mitchell@ucdenver.edu 2-015 Miers, Anne C. acmiers@fsw.leidenuniv.nl 2-016 Mitchell, Kimberly kimberly.mitchell@unh.edu 2-035, 2-035 Meier, Ann meierann@umn.edu 4-020 Meilin, Yao mlyao@bnu.edu.cn 4-023 (74) Melby, Janet jmelby@iastate.edu 3-006 (10) Melendez, Raquel raquelendez@gmail.com 3-006 (22) Menon, Madhavi madhavi@nova.edu 2-005 (19), 2-042 (75) Menzer, Melissa mmenzer@umd.edu 2-060 (55) 159 Mitic, Wayne wayne.mitic@gems5.gov.bc.ca 3-012 Monshouwer, Karin kmonshouwer@trimbos.nl 3-006 (2), 3-024 (39) Morris, Amanda S. amanda.morris@okstate.edu 4-005 (71), 4-058 (74) Miyake, Elisa ermiyake@hotmail.com 4-005 (40) Montana, Bryan bryanmontana88@gmail.com 3-006 (19), 4-041 (18) Morris, Pamela pamela.morris@nyu.edu 4-071, 4-071 Miyazaki, Yasuo yasuom@vt.edu 4-005 (36) Moody, James jmoody77@soc.duke.edu 4-014 Morrison, Anthony P. anthony.p.morrison@manchester.ac.uk 4-047 Mobasser, Arian arian.mobasser@gmail.com 3-006 (76) Mooney, Karen kmoon3@uis.edu 3-051 (48) Morrison-Cohen, Sarah morris75@students.wwu.edu 2-019, 3-044 (79) Modecki, Kathryn K.Modecki@murdoch.edu.au 3-006 (17), 3-031, 3-051 (83), 4-065, 4-065 Moore, E. Whitney G. ewgmoore@ku.edu 2-005 (65) Morrissey, Rebecca A. rmorriss@nd.edu 4-041 (7) Moore, Forrest forrestm@americaspromise.org 2-039, 2-039 Mortimer, Jeylan T. morti002@umn.edu 2-064, 4-020 Moorman, Jessie jmoorman@connect.carleton.ca 3-006 (23) Motes, Michael A. michael.motes@utd.edu 2-073, 2-073 Morales, Jessica jmorales9587@yahoo.com 3-051 (22) Mounts, Nina S. nmounts@niu.edu 3-006 (14), 4-005 (29), 4-061 Moran, Lyndsey R. LMoran@u.washington.edu 2-028, 4-035 Mrug, Sylvie smrug@uab.edu 2-060 (19), 3-024 (60), 3-024 (66), 3036, 3-063, 3-063, 4-023 (33) Moed, Anat moed@utexas.edu 2-032 Mogaki, Madoka madoka.mogaki@gmail.com 2-024 (80) Mohr, Phil Phil.Mohr@csiro.au 4-034 Moilanen, Kristin L. klmoilanen@mail.wvu.edu 2-017, 2-017, 2-060 (36), 2-060 (72), 4-023 (70), 4-058 (31) Molano, Andres aem929@mail.harvard.edu 2-038 Molina, Yerko ypmolina@uc.cl 4-058 (42) Mollborn, Stefanie Stefanie.Mollborn@colorado.edu 2-029 Molz, Ashleigh R. ashleigh.molz@temple.edu 4-047, 4-047, 4-047 Monahan, Kathryn monahan@pitt.edu 2-009, 3-068, 4-065, 4-065 Moncloa, Fe fxmoncloa@ucdavis.edu 2-005 (24) Monn, Amy R. monnx005@umn.edu 2-060 (10) Moretti, Marlene moretti@sfu.ca 3-021, 3-051 (68), 4-005 (56) Morgan, Ashley S. amorgan@yorku.ca 2-042 (60) Morgan, Elizabeth M. emorgan@boisestate.edu 3-010.5, 4-010 Morgan, Linda J. lmorgan@casey.org 2-066 Morgan, Nicole R. nrf106@psu.edu 3-059 Morinville, Amélie amori089@uottawa.ca 2-060 (18) Morley, Christina E. cemorley@loyola.edu 4-041 (43) 160 Muchina, Sophie somuchina@yahoo.com 2-042 (26) Mueller, Megan K. megan.kiely@tufts.edu 2-042 (77), 3-054 Muise, Amy amuise@uoguelph.ca 4-049 Mulvey, Edward P. mulveyep@upmc.edu 4-065 Mulvey, Kelly Lynn klmulvey@umd.edu 3-044 (74), 3-051 (3), 4-058 (54) Munniksma, Anke a.munniksma@rug.nl 4-041 (27), 4-061 Munson, Michelle R. michelle.munson@nyu.edu 3-006 (6) Munster, Jourdan jourdan.munster.828@my.csun.edu 3-044 (48), 4-041 (18) Murphy, Debra A. DMurphy@mednet.ucla.edu 4-058 (15) Murphy, Kelly kelly.murphy@cgu.edu 3-051 (66) Murphy-Legate, Ashley 6anm1@queensu.ca 2-024 (44), 2-042 (71) Murray, Laura C. lamurray@gse.upenn.edu 4-023 (80), 4-041 (22) Murray-Close, Dianna Dianna.Murray-Close@uvm.edu 2-005 (68), 3-006 (50), 3-051 (52), 4058 (6) Murry, Velma M. velma.m.murry@Vanderbilt.Edu 2-071 Mussad, Nada H. nmussad@gmail.com 4-023 (10) Mustanski, Brian Brian@Northwestern.edu 3-011, 3-011, 4-026 Myers, Sarah L. myersl8@wfu.edu 3-024 (8) Nair, Rajni Rajni.nair@asu.edu 2-077 Nakkula, Mike mnakkula@gse.upenn.edu 4-023 (80), 4-041 (22) Nam, J. Sophia namje@bc.edu 4-041 (63) Nangle, Doug Doug.Nangle@umit.maine.edu 2-060 (57), 4-023 (55) Narayan, Angela J. naray076@umn.edu 2-060 (10) Nardi, Fernanda L. fernanda.nardi@yahoo.com.br 2-024 (26) Nelson, Paul A. panelson@ucsc.edu 3-024 (72) Neppl, Tricia K. tneppl@iastate.edu 4-038 Newcomb, Caroline E. cen8nf@virginia.edu 2-060 (46) Narvaez, Darcia dnarvaez@nd.edu 3-015, 4-037 Natsuaki, Misaki N. misaki.natsuaki@ucr.edu 2-024 (67), 2-060 (69), 3-009, 3-026, 3-068 Naumovska, Andromahi andromahi_n@yahoo.com 2-005 (49) Nebbitt, Von vnebbitt@uic.edu 3-028 Neblett, Enrique W. eneblett@email.unc.edu 2-024 (29), 2-060 (63), 2-062, 3-006 (29), 4-005 (81), 4-058 (38) Needham, Belinda bneedham@uab.edu 2-043 Negriff, Sonya negriff@usc.edu 2-048, 4-041 (1), 4-058 (4) Neidershier, Jenae M. jenaemn@psu.edu 3-009, 3-051 (5) Nelemans, Stefanie A. s.a.nelemans@uu.nl 2-016, 2-042 (58) Nelson, David david_nelson@byu.edu 4-027 Nelson, Eric E. nelsone@mail.nih.gov 2-030 Nelson, Geoffrey B. gnelson@wlu.ca 3-006 (66) Nelson, Margo margo.nelson@gmail.com 2-060 (7) Napolitano, Christopher M. cmnapolitano@gmail.com 2-042 (77) 161 Newcomb, Ericka C. ecallen15@yahoo.com 2-005 (50) Newton, Nicole tua89865@temple.edu 2-036 Ng, Glanies glanies@gmail.com 2-024 (81) Ngomane, Tsakani taskani.ngomne@up.ac.za 3-020 Nguyen, Tammy tammy_022@hotmail.com 2-024 (1) Nicotera, Nicole Nicole.Nicotera@du.edu 2-005 (8) Nielsen, Blake L. blnielsen@crimson.ua.edu 2-024 (19), 4-027 Nies, Kimberly nies@ori.org 4-034 Nigro, Michael mjnigro@ilstu.edu 2-060 (75) Nini, Wu nini713@126.com 4-023 (74) Nishina, Adrienne anishina@ucdavis.edu 2-005 (53), 4-058 (48) Noack, Peter peter.noack@uni-jena.de 2-027, 4-041 (24), 4-061 Noam, Gil Gil_Noam@hms.harvard.edu 3-017, 4-025 O'Connor, Caitlin caitlinoconnor4@gmail.com 2-024 (1), 4-003 Oh, Janet S. janetoh@alum.pomona.edu 2-005 (82), 3-044 (48), 4-041 (57) Nolan, Lindsay LLNolan21@gmail.com 2-034 O'Donnell, Megan Megan.A.ODonnell@asu.edu 2-024 (27), 2-024 (28), 2-077, 4-058 (12), 4-058 (21) Oh, Wonjung wjoh@umich.edu 4-031 Nolin, Pierre pierre.nolin@uqtr.ca 2-060 (2) Noll, Jennie jennie.noll@cchmc.org 3-006 (84), 3-044 (31), 3-052 Norman, Nancy nnorman@sd38.bc.ca 4-058 (3) Norris, Joan E. jnorris@wlu.ca 2-042 (24), 2-074, 3-038 Nott, Brooke D. dolencb@onid.orst.edu 3-044 (67) Novick, Rona rnovick1@yu.edu 2-060 (44) Novick, Sarah novick@bu.edu 2-007 Nunally, Richard richardnunally@gmail.com 4-005 (22) Nunn, Anna M. amn8970@uncw.edu 3-044 (37) Nunner-Winkler, Gertrud nunner-winkler@t-online.de 2-033 Nurmi, Jari-Erik jari-erik.j.nurmi@jyu.fi 2-074, 4-005 (46), 4-014 Núñez, Andrés andres.nunez@gmail.com 2-042 (34) O'Brien, Kirk kobrien@casey.org 2-042 (62), 2-066 O'Brien, Sharon sharonaobrien@msn.com 4-041 (83) O'Hara, Lauren K. LaurenKellyOHara@gmail.com 2-042 (2), 2-060 (31) O'Holleran, Taylor toholler@uwyo.edu 3-024 (55), 3-044 (55), 3-051 (55) O'Leary-Barrett, Maeve maeve.oleary-barrett@mail.mcgill.ca 4-016 O'Malley, Patrick pomalley@umich.edu 2-003 O'Neal, Keri K. keri.oneal@csueastbay.edu 2-024 (7) O'Neill, Susan A. sao@sfu.ca 2-031 O'Sullivan, Lucia F. osulliv@unb.ca 3-059 Obana, Mariko maripao106@gmail.com 2-005 (69) Oberlander, Sarah sarah.oberlander@gmail.com 2-006 (G3), 2-042 (7), 3-010, 3-042, 3-057 Oberle, Eva evelino@gmx.net 3-044 (77), 4-025 Oblad, Timothy P. tim.oblad@ttu.edu 2-060 (6) Obraztsova, Olga V. olga.obraztsova@temple.edu 2-036, 3-051 (1) Obsuth, Ingrid ivobsuth@sfu.ca 3-021, 4-005 (56) Ocean, Mia miaocean@bu.edu 4-046 162 Ojanen, Tiina tojanen@usf.edu 3-033, 3-033, 3-051 (50), 4-005 (74) Okado, Yuko okado@psu.edu 4-066, 4-066 Okazaki, Sumie sumie.okazaki@nyu.edu 2-042 (27), 4-005 (30) Oladipo, Samuel E. kingola2001@yahoo.com 2-024 (4) Olate, Rene olate.1@osu.edu 3-051 (34) Oldehinkel, Tineke a.j.oldehinkel@med.umcg.nl 3-006 (65) Olivares, Isaura isaura25@gmail.com 4-005 (64) Oliver, Bonamy R. bonamy.oliver@kcl.ac.uk 3-024 (1) Oliver, Pamella H. poliver@fullerton.edu 4-005 (19) Olsbom, Camilla cmolsb@utu.fi 2-057 Olsen, Joseph Joseph_Olsen@byu.edu 4-037 Olsho, Lauren Lauren_Olsho@abtassoc.com 4-067 Oosterhoff, Benjamin benjamin.oosterhoff@mail.wvu.edu 4-041 (16) Opal, Deanna deanna.sandman@gmail.com 2-060 (54) Ozer, Emily eozer@berkeley.edu 3-045.5, 4-002.5 Pancer, Mark mpancer@wlu.ca 3-006 (66) Opal, Deanna deannamopal@gmail.com 2-005 (84) Paasch-Anderson, Julie juliepa@ameritech.net 3-051 (27) Pandya, Niyati npandya@clarku.edu 3-044 (28) Oppenheim, David oppenhei@psy.haifa.ac.il 3-024 (12) Pabon, Shairy scpabon@gmail.com 2-055 Pane, Heather htpane@gmail.com 3-023 Ordoubadi, Fatemeh fordou@linfield.edu 4-058 (32) Pabst, Stephanie stephanie.pabst@cchmc.org 3-006 (64), 4-005 (38), 4-023 (1) Panfile, Tia M. tpanfile2@washcoll.edu 2-018, 3-051 (76), 4-012, 4-023 (72) Ormel, Johan j.ormel@med.umcg.nl 3-006 (2), 3-006 (65), 4-042 Pace, Cecilia S. ceciliapace@fastwebnet.it 2-005 (47), 3-024 (47), 4-005 (23) Pang, Karen C. kclpang@uw.edu 4-035, 4-041 (59) Orobio de Castro, Bram B.Castro@fss.uu.nl 2-014, 2-042 (76), 3-037 Pacheco-Santivanez, Nathaly S. nathaly.pachecosantivaez.220@my.csun .edu 2-005 (82), 3-044 (48), 4-041 (57) Papadakis, Alison apapadakis@loyola.edu 3-044 (44), 3-051 (43), 4-041 (42), 4-041 (43) Padilla, Amado apadilla@stanford.edu 3-062 Paquette, Linda linda_paquette@uqac.ca 3-024 (77) Padilla-Walker, Laura M. laura_walker@byu.edu 2-060 (72), 3-051 (75) Pardini, Dustin dap38@pitt.edu 4-005 (68) Page, Matthew J. matthewjlpage@gmail.com 2-052, 3-044 (82), 4-023 (82), 4-044 Pardo, Seth T. seth.pardo@gmail.com 4-005 (2) Pahl, Kerstin kerstin.pahl@nyumc.org 4-023 (39), 4-023 (81) Parent, Justin M. jmparent@uvm.edu 4-023 (10) Palbusa, Julienne A. julienne.palbusa@email.ucr.edu 4-023 (18) Parent, Sophie sophie.parent@umontreal.ca 3-006 (39), 3-044 (1) Pallini, Susanna pallini@uniroma3.it 3-024 (47), 4-005 (23) Parisi, Nicole nparisi@usc.edu 4-058 (44) Palmer, Cara A. cara.palmer@mail.wvu.edu 2-049, 4-005 (72) Park, Heejung heejung1027@gmail.com 4-023 (28) Palmquist, Maja mpalmqui@macalester.edu 2-060 (12) Park, Irene J. ikim1@nd.edu 2-005 (16), 2-024 (16), 2-051, 3-051 (29) Orpinas, Pamela porpinas@uga.edu 4-004, 4-022 Osgood, D. Wayne wosgood@psu.edu 4-014 Osher, David dosher@air.org 2-039 Oshri, Assaf assafoshri@Rochester.edu 3-006 (40), 3-051 (10) Ostrov, Jamie M. jostrov@buffalo.edu 4-023 (69), 4-041 (69) Ott, Jamie jott@umd.edu 3-044 (74) Otten, Roy R.otten@bsi.ru.nl 2-065, 4-058 (41) Overbeek, Geertjan g.overbeek@uu.nl 3-008, 4-063 Overstreet, Stacy soverst@tulane.edu 4-023 (62) Oxtoby, Claire claire.oxtoby@mu.edu 2-060 (49), 3-051 (45) Pan, Jingtong jingtong.pan@tufts.edu 2-039 Pan, Serene serenepan@gmail.com 3-024 (20) 163 Park, Sira sirapark@gmail.com 3-044 (20) Parker, Delana M. dmparker@ucla.edu 3-029 Pegram, Kara Pegrak@spu.edu 2-036, 4-023 (58) Persson, Kristina kristina.persson0011@stud.hkr.se 3-024 (73) Parker, Jeffrey G. J.G.Parker@ua.edu 2-060 (48), 4-027, 4-027 Peled, Maya maya@mcs.bc.ca 2-005 (41) Peskin, Melissa Melissa.F.Peskin@uth.tmc.edu 2-024 (46) Pasch, Keryn E. kpasch@austin.utexas.edu 2-060 (83), 4-005 (12) Pels, Trees V. TVM.Pels@psy.vu.nl 3-040 Peters, Ray D. ray.peters@queensu.ca 3-006 (66) Pasquarella, Adrian a.pasquarella@gmail.com 2-005 (13), 2-024 (58) Peluso, Deanna deannapeluso@gmail.com 2-031 Peterson, Katelin katelin.peterson@richmond.edu 2-024 (47) Pasupathi, Monisha monisha.pasupathi@psych.utah.edu 3-044 (75), 4-036 Pendry, Patricia ppendry@wsu.edu 3-044 (66) Petrokubi, Julie petrokubi@wisc.edu 3-010, 3-037, 4-002.5 Patrathiti, Prakairat prakairatp@yahoo.com 2-005 (67) Peneston, Kelly R. kpeneston@gmail.com 3-006 (46) Petrovicova, Zuzana petrovic@fss.muni.cz 2-027, 4-058 (27) Patrick, Megan E. meganpat@isr.umich.edu 2-003, 2-064, 4-007 Penilla, Carlos penillac@healthpsych.ucsf.edu 3-051 (35) Petrunka, Kelly petrunka@queensu.ca 3-044 (70) Pattiselanno, Kim k.l.pattiselanno@rug.nl 3-044 (51) Perdue, Neil neil.perdue@gmail.com 2-042 (23), 4-005 (76) Peugh, James james.peugh@cchmc.org 3-044 (31) Patton, Christine L. christine.lynn.patton@gmail.com 3-013, 3-013 Peretti, Matteo matteo.peretti@gmail.com 3-061 Pfeifer, Jennifer jpfeifer@uoregon.edu 1-004, 2-025, 2-025 Patton, Emily emily.patton@case.edu 2-005 (1), 4-023 (49) Perez, Maria mvperez@loyola.edu 4-041 (42) Phagan, Jennifer jphagan@utk.edu 4-060 Pattridge, Ty tpartrid@wayne.edu 2-033 Perez-Brena, Norma nperezbr@asu.edu 4-005 (27) Phillips, Sarah F. sfp@brandeis.edu 4-005 (16) Paysnick, Amy A. amy.paysnick@gmail.com 4-058 (66) Perez-Edgar, Koraly kxp24@psu.edu 2-042 (1) Phillips, Tommy M. tphillips@humansci.msstate.edu 4-058 (18) Peake, Shannon peake@uoregon.edu 2-025 Perez-Escoda, Nuria nperezescoda@ub.edu 3-051 (72) Pierre, Cynthia L. cpierre@luc.edu 2-060 (64), 3-060 Pearson, Theresa theresaellie@gmail.com 2-060 (71) Perren, Sonja perren@jacobscenter.uzh.ch 3-024 (43), 3-031, 4-072 Pinderhughes, Ellen ellen.pinderhughes@tufts.edu 3-051 (12), 4-004 Peck, Stephen C. link@umich.edu 3-044 (29), 4-023 (16) Perritt, Marcia mperritt@gmail.com 4-028 Pine, Daniel pined@mail.nih.gov 2-030, 2-042 (1), 4-031 Peets, Kätlin kapeet@utu.fi 2-057, 2-057, 2-057 Perry, Cheryl L. cheryl.l.perry@uth.tmc.edu 2-060 (83) Pittman, Joe pittmjf@auburn.edu 2-042 (79), 4-041 (66) 164 Pittman, Laura lpittman@niu.edu 4-058 (14) Ponte, Alyssa M. Milot@bc.edu 2-069, 2-069 Preddy, Teresa M. teri.preddy@gmail.com 2-024 (68), 3-059 Pitula, Clio pitul001@umn.edu 2-042 (32), 4-005 (77) Poon, Colleen colleen@mcs.bc.ca 2-005 (41) Prelow, Hazel M. h.prelow@albany.edu 3-051 (61), 4-005 (64) Pitzer, Jennifer R. jpitzer@pdx.edu 4-005 (21) Pope, Denise dpope@stanford.edu 2-024 (21) Prescott, Jennifer E. jennifer.prescott@tufts.edu 2-039, 4-023 (64) Plata-Potter, Sandra I. ixaplata@gmail.com 4-041 (14) Pope, Elizabeth epope@luc.edu 2-060 (60) Price, Chara D. chara.price@asu.edu 2-068, 3-051 (17), 4-034, 4-056 Ploskonka, Rachel rploskonka@gmail.com 3-044 (78) Porche, Michelle V. mporche@wellesley.edu 4-058 (28) Price, LeShawndra lprice@mail.nih.gov 2-006 (G4), 3-047, 3-047, 3-057, 3-057 Plummer, Pam PPlummer@cfyf.org 4-058 (7) Porfeli, Erik eporfeli@neoucom.edu 3-035, 3-035 Priess, Heather A. hapriess@wisc.edu 4-035 Plunkett, Scott scott.plunkett@csun.edu 2-024 (45), 2-042 (11), 4-005 (22), 4058 (25) Posthuma, Jamie jposthuma@alliant.edu 4-041 (50) Prince van Leeuwen, Andrea a.l.prince@uva.nl 4-042 Poteat, Paul PoteatP@bc.edu 2-069, 2-069, 3-010.5, 3-010.5, 3-034 Principe, Connor P. principe@pacificu.edu 3-006 (76) Potenza, Marc N. marc.potenza@yale.edu 4-042 Prinstein, Mitchell J. mitch.prinstein@unc.edu 2-008, 2-024 (51), 2-038, 3-036, 3048, 3-048, 4-023 (52), 4-039 Poelen, Evelien e.poelen@bsi.ru.nl 2-065 Polak, Emily empolak@gmail.com 4-005 (65) Polihronis, Christine cpolihro@connect.carleton.ca 3-024 (48) Polk, Rachel rachel.polk@furman.edu 2-060 (51) Pollak, Seth spollak@wisc.edu 2-012 Pollard, Michael mpollard@rand.org 3-058 Pollastri, Alisha R. alisha.pollastri@gmail.com 3-044 (71) Polo, Antonio J. apolo@depaul.edu 2-020, 2-053 Pomerantz, Eva pomerntz@illinois.edu 3-024 (28), 4-005 (7), 4-041 (21) Potter, Sandra splatapotter@gmail.com 3-006 (28) Potter, Sarah sarah.potter@hhs.gov 2-042 (7) Potts, Jennifer jenni.potts@vanderbilt.edu 2-004, 3-051 (62) Poulin, Francois poulin.francois@uqam.ca 2-005 (51), 3-019 Powell, Claudia claudiap@email.arizona.edu 3-014 Power, Thomas G. tompower@wsu.edu 2-024 (30) Pratt, Michael W. mpratt@wlu.ca 2-033, 2-042 (24), 2-042 (78), 2-074, 2-074, 3-038, 3-038, 3-051 (71) 165 Prinzie, Peter p.prinzie@uu.nl 2-060 (73) Pritchard, Mary E. marypritchard@boisestate.edu 3-010.5 Pritzker, Suzanne spritzker@uh.edu 2-042 (25) Proano, Daniela danilapr7@gmail.com 4-041 (14) Pryce, Julia jpryce@luc.edu 4-046 Psihogios, Alexandra M. apsihogios@luc.edu 2-042 (38) Punamäki, Raija-Leena raija-leena.punamaki@uta.fi 3-043, 3-056, 4-049.5 Purtell, Kelly kpurtell@prc.utexas.edu 2-029 Rackham, David rackhamup@gmail.com 2-060 (78) Ramos, Michelle C. michellr@college.usc.edu 2-024 (72), 4-041 (5), 4-058 (44) Putnick, Diane L. putnickd@mail.nih.gov 2-024 (57), 3-006 (16) Rackley, Kadie kadie.rackley@gmail.com 3-051 (11) Ramsey, Meagan A. meagan.ramsey@mail.wvu.edu 2-049 Pössel, Patrick patrick.possel@louisville.edu 4-051, 4-051 Racz, Sarah J. saj5@u.washington.edu 3-051 (9), 4-066 Ramsook, Kizzann A. kizzram@gmail.com 3-051 (7) Qin, Lili liliqin2@illinois.edu 4-005 (7) Radmacher, Kimberley kradmacher@csudh.edu 2-032 Ramzy, Laura M. lramzy@uoregon.edu 2-042 (21) Qin, Yanyun yaoyao8609@yahoo.cn 2-005 (62), 2-060 (62), 3-006 (58), 4023 (63) Raffaelli, Marcela mraffael@illinois.edu 2-024 (65), 3-024 (27), 3-043, 4-056 Ran, Yarden yardenran@gmail.com 2-005 (48) Raftery, Jacquelyn jraftery@clarku.edu 2-077, 2-077, 3-028, 4-041 (74) Rana, Meenal ranameen@msu.edu 2-013, 4-058 (70) Ragan, Daniel dragan@psu.edu 4-014 Rancourt, Diana rancourt@email.unc.edu 3-048 Rahdar, Elica elica1005@yahoo.com 2-042 (69) Randall, Brandy A. brandy.randall@ndsu.edu 3-002, 4-058 (18) Raine, Adrian araine@sas.upenn.edu 3-009, 4-005 (68) Randall, Edin erandal@luc.edu 2-024 (18) Rainford, Ashley arainford@wesleyan.edu 4-023 (81) Ranney, John D. john.ranney@my.ndsu.edu 4-023 (47) Rajan, Sonali sonals612@gmail.com 4-023 (37) Rao, Mrinalini A. marao2@illinois.edu 2-042 (45) Ralston, Peter ralst003@umn.edu 2-005 (76) Rarick, Jason jrarick@gmail.com 3-051 (11) Rambaran, Ashwin ashwinrambaran@hotmail.com 2-038 Rasheed, Damira drasheed85@aol.com 3-024 (81) Ramey, Heather L. heather.ramey@humber.ca 4-005 (17) Rasmussen, Katie E. krasmus2@mix.wvu.edu 2-060 (72) Ramirez, Alysha N. anram33@gmail.com 3-006 (69) Raufelder, Diana diana.raufelder@fu-berlin.de 3-051 (23) Ramirez-Salazar, Blanca ramirezblanca@msn.com 4-041 (14) Rawana, Jennine S. rawana@yorku.ca 2-042 (60), 3-051 (33) Qu, Yang yangqu3@uiuc.edu 3-024 (28), 4-041 (21) Queirolo, Sergio sergioq@ucsc.edu 2-005 (23) Quigley, Danielle dquigley@connect.carleton.ca 3-024 (48) Quillin, John jquillin@mcvh-vcu.edu 2-024 (9) Quinn, Bethany S. bsquinn@gmail.com 4-058 (14) Quinn, Brandy bquinn1@stanford.edu 4-048 Quinn, Catherine catherine.quinn@mq.edu.au 3-051 (32), 3-051 (42), 4-019, 4-019 Quiroga, Cintia cquiroga@uottawa.ca 2-005 (59) Raaijmakers, Quinten A. q.a.w.raaijmakers@uu.nl 2-016 Rabe, Kristen E. kristenrabe@gmail.com 4-058 (14) Raby, Lee rabyx006@umn.edu 2-005 (70), 2-024 (5), 3-044 (56) 166 Read, Glenna glenna.read@gmail.com 4-005 (35) Reilly, Timothy S. tsreilly@stanford.edu 3-054, 4-068, 4-068 Reyes, Claudia X. cxreyes@gwmail.gwu.edu 2-060 (5) Read, Jennifer P. jpread@buffalo.edu 2-060 (32), 3-024 (33), 4-023 (51) Reinders, Heinz heinz.reinders@uni-wuerzburg.de 2-024 (17), 3-037 Reyna, Valerie F. vr53@cornell.edu 4-005 (2) Ream, Geoffrey L. ream@adelphi.edu 4-041 (39) Reinecke, Mark m-reinecke@northwestern.edu 2-060 (58) Reynolds, Bridget M. BReynol1@ucla.edu 3-029, 3-029, 3-029, 3-029 Rebellon, Cesar cesar.rebellon@unh.edu 4-041 (17) Reinke, Wendy M. reinke@missouri.edu 3-068 Reynolds, Lindsay 8lr1@queensu.ca 2-005 (42) Recchia, Holly hrecchia@gmail.com 2-042 (74), 3-061, 4-023 (79) Reis, Olaf olaf.reis@med.uni-rostock.de 2-042 (51) Rhemtulla, Mijke mijke@ku.edu 2-005 (65) Reeb, Ben T. btreeb@ucdavis.edu 4-071 Reiss, David david.reiss@yale.edu 3-009, 3-051 (5) Rhew, Isaac C. rhew@u.washington.edu 3-068 Reed, Lauren reedla@umich.edu 2-061 Reissig, Birgit reisig@dji.de 2-022 Rhodes, Jean jean.rhodes@umb.edu 3-024 (64), 4-041 (67), 4-046, 4-067, 4-067, 4-067 Reed, Nicole nreed1516@gmail.com 2-005 (75) Reitz, Ellen E.Reitz@uu.nl 2-005 (38), 3-006 (37) Reese, Bianka M. bmreese@email.unc.edu 3-051 (31) Ren, Shufang yuanfang.861119@163.com 2-024 (3), 2-042 (3) Reese-Weber, Marla mjreese@ilstu.edu 2-060 (75) Renteria, Ashleigh A. arenteri@alumni.nd.edu 4-005 (62) Reeves, Patricia reevesp@uga.edu 4-004 Repetti, Rena Repetti@psych.ucla.edu 3-029, 3-029, 3-029, 3-029 Reid, Alexander J. deadmetal112@yahoo.com 2-024 (45) Repetto, Paula prepetto@uc.cl 4-058 (42) Reifman, Alan alan.reifman@ttu.edu 2-060 (6) Resett, Santiago sresett@arnet.com.ar 4-013 Reigeluth, Christopher S. CReigeluth@clarku.edu 3-044 (71) Respress, Brandon N. brespres@umich.edu 4-041 (60) Reijneveld, Sijmen s.a.reijneveld@med.umcg.nl 3-006 (2) Restrepo, Diego drestrepo@ces.edu.co 3-024 (59) Reilly, Erin ereilly1@nd.edu 2-024 (34) Reuter, Tyson R. tyson.reuter@gmail.com 3-006 (46), 3-023 167 Rhodes, Kimberly A. kimberlyr@oslc.org 3-068 Ribot, Arantxa aribotho@hotmail.com 3-051 (72) Rice, Eric ericr@usc.edu 4-041 (6) Richards, Dayton daytonrichards@gmail.com 2-024 (69) Richards, Katie katieannrichards@gmail.com 4-051 Richards, Maryse mrichar@luc.edu 2-024 (15), 3-003, 3-003 Richards, Spencer spencer.richards@aggiemail.usu.edu 3-028 Richardson, Amy amy_richardson@rand.org 4-055 Richardson, Bridget L. bridgetr@umich.edu 2-010 Rischall, Michal S. michalrischall2014@u.northwestern.edu 2-060 (58) Roche, Kathleen M. kroche@gsu.edu 3-030, 3-030 Richaud, María C. minzi@ciudad.com.ar 2-005 (54), 4-058 (56) Riser, Diana riser_diana@columbusstate.edu 4-041 (4) Rock, Patrick F. prock@ucla.edu 2-060 (26), 3-051 (47) Richmond, Ashley arichmo3@fau.edu 2-060 (33), 3-024 (4), 3-044 (5), 3-051 (48) Risser, Scott D. srisser@mtech.edu 3-024 (62) Rodgers, Kathleen B. rodgersk@wsu.edu 2-024 (30) Ritterman Weintraub, Miranda mirandalucia1@gmail.com 4-060 Rodkin, Philip C. rodkin@illinois.edu 2-038, 4-069 Rivas Drake, Deborah deborah_rivas@brown.edu 3-025.5, 4-045 Rodriguez, Aubrey aubreyro@usc.edu 4-041 (5) Rivera, Christine cdr39@duke.edu 2-005 (77) Rodriguez, Sue A. sarodri3@asu.edu 3-044 (14), 3-051 (28) Robbins, Paul paul.ant.robbins@gmail.com 3-051 (11) Rodriguez, Vivian rodriguezvm@vcu.edu 2-024 (9) Roberts, Steven O. sor216@nyu.edu 4-005 (81) Roelse, Holly holly.roelse@utdallas.edu 2-042 (46), 4-058 (72) Robins, Garry garrylr@unimelb.edu.au 4-034 Roeser, Robert rroeser@pdx.edu 3-062 Robins, Richard W. rwrobins@ucdavis.edu 4-023 (19) Roeter, Stephanie stephanie.roeter@email.wsu.edu 3-044 (66) Robinson, Brett S. b4160@unb.ca 3-044 (12) Rofey, Dana L. rofeydl@upmc.edu 3-024 (58) Robinson, Cecil crobinso@bamaed.ua.edu 4-028, 4-028 Rogers, William B. wbrogers@umich.edu 2-060 (11) Robinson, Latasha A. latarobi@umich.edu 4-023 (11) Rogers-Sirin, Lauren lauren.rogerssirin@csi.cuny.edu 2-042 (61), 4-005 (66) Robinson, Michael mrobinson4@sw.ua.edu 4-028 Rogosch, Fred Fred_Rogosch@urmc.rochester.edu 3-051 (4), 3-067 Robles, Theodore Robles@psych.ucla.edu 3-029, 3-029, 3-029 Rojas-Flores, Lisseth lrojas@fuller.edu 4-005 (13) Richwine, Robbie robbierichwine@gmail.com 2-042 (13) Rickert, Nicolette nrickert@willamette.edu 3-044 (9) Rickman, Aimee arickman@girlscouts.org 2-045 Ridder, Denise D. d.t.d.deridder@uu.nl 2-022 Riddle, Russell rbr103020@utdallas.edu 2-073 Riedel, Marion mr108@columbia.edu 4-023 (37) Riina, Elizabeth beth.riina@gmail.com 2-005 (7) Rijsdijk, Fruhling fruhling.rijsdijk@kcl.ac.uk 3-024 (70) Riley, Anna rileyann@csr.nih.gov 3-047 Riley, Moira R. mrriley2@uno.edu 3-006 (68) Ringlever, Linda l.ringlever@pwo.ru.nl 4-058 (41) Rinne, Allison a.rinne@hotmail.com 2-042 (71) Ripperger-Suhler, Ken kenrs57@hotmail.com 4-023 (41) Robnett, Rachael rrobnett@ucsc.edu 2-005 (23), 3-044 (23), 4-023 (25) 168 Romeo, Katherine E. kromeo2@uic.edu 4-058 (33) Ross, Latisha llross@umich.edu 2-059, 2-059 Ruder, Teague teague_ruder@rand.org 4-055 Romer, Adrienne L. adrienne.romer@gmail.com 4-005 (2) Rossi Del Corso, Annalisa annalisa.rossidelcorso@unicatt.it 4-058 (9) Rudisil, Sarah selizday@gmail.com 3-044 (65) Romer, Daniel dromer@asc.upenn.edu 2-005 (40) Rostad, Whitney wrostad@gmail.com 3-006 (11) Rudolph, Karen krudolph@illinois.edu 2-004, 2-012, 2-044, 3-026, 4-023 (73) Romero, Edna eromero1@luc.edu 2-024 (15) Rote, Wendy M. wrote@psych.rochester.edu 2-070, 3-051 (8) Rudolph, Marissa mrudolph@spu.edu 2-036, 2-060 (59) Romo, Laura F. lromo@education.ucsb.edu 2-005 (34), 3-051 (56), 4-023 (31), 4041 (12) Rothenberg, William A. warothen@ncsu.edu 3-051 (40) Ruggieri, Sabrina sabrina.ruggieri@psy.unibe.ch 4-072 Rotheram-Borus, Mary Jane rotheram@ucla.edu 4-041 (6) Runions, Kevin krunions@uvic.ca 3-031, 3-031 Rothman, Emily erothman@bu.edu 3-044 (45) Rusby, Julie juliecr@ori.org 3-058, 4-034 Rothstein, Ethan Ethan.Rothstein@umit.maine.edu 2-042 (31), 2-060 (57), 4-005 (44), 4023 (55) Ruschoff, Britta b.ruschoff@rug.nl 4-023 (50) Rompala, Vicky vrompala@yahoo.com 2-050 Ronis, Scott T. sronis@unb.ca 2-042 (36), 4-005 (6) Roosa, Mark W. mark.roosa@asu.edu 2-024 (27), 2-024 (28), 2-043, 2-077, 3-030, 4-058 (12), 4-058 (21) Rose, Amanda RoseA@missouri.edu 3-007, 3-048, 4-039, 4-063 Rose, Chad A. car047@shsu.edu 4-058 (75) Rose, Laura E. laurose1@umbc.edu 2-042 (5), 3-044 (47) Rose-Krasnor, Linda linda.rose-krasnor@brocku.ca 2-005 (18), 4-005 (17) Rosen, Dana dkr3@duke.edu 2-005 (77) Rosen, Lisa mailto:lhr071000@utdallas.edu 2-042 (69) Rosenfeld, Amitte Amitte_Rosenfeld@brown.edu 2-024 (39) Ross, Freida fross@branksome.on.ca 3-024 (65) Roubinov, Danielle droubino@asu.edu 3-052 Rovaris, Jillandra rovaris@tulane.edu 4-023 (62) Rowe, Richard r.rowe@shef.ac.uk 3-024 (70), 4-041 (34) Rusk, Natalie nrusk@media.mit.edu 3-044 (72) Rusnak, Elizabeth earusnak@yahoo.com 3-006 (14) Russell, Shannon L. russells@umd.edu 2-005 (21) Rowley, Stephanie J. srowley@umich.edu 2-059, 4-018, 4-023 (29) Russell, Stephen T. strussell@arizona.edu 2-041, 2-069, 3-008, 3-010.5, 3-010.5, 3-024 (82), 3-034, 4-021, 4-026 Roy, Kevin kroy@umd.edu 3-045.5 Rutherford, Teomara teomara@uci.edu 3-006 (3) Rubin, Kenneth krubin@umd.edu 2-060 (55), 2-060 (70), 3-051 (48) Rutland, Adam a.rutland@kent.ac.uk 3-044 (74), 3-051 (3), 4-058 (54) Ruchty, Joshua rooshio@gmail.com 4-037 Ruttle, Paula L. ruttle@wisc.edu 2-012, 2-012, 2-042 (73), 2-067 Ruck, Martin mruck@gc.cuny.edu 3-007 Ryan, Allison allison.ryan2@gmail.com 4-041 (52), 4-058 (1), 4-058 (55) 169 Ryan, Aubrey E. abureyelizabethryan@gmail.com 4-041 (33) Salmela-Aro, Katariina katariina.salmela-aro@helsinki.fi 4-005 (46), 4-014, 4-033 Saxbe, Darby dsaxbe@usc.edu 2-024 (72) Ryan, Rebecca rmr64@georgetown.edu 4-041 (10), 4-058 (13) Salmivalli, Christina tiina.salmivalli@utu.fi 1-001.5, 3-064, 3-064, 3-064, 3-064, 4-069 Sayfan, Liat lsayfan@ucdavis.edu 2-018 Ryan, Tiffany tryan@mail.utexas.edu 2-024 (49), 3-044 (62) Ryce, Patrice pryce@nyu.edu 2-042 (27), 2-042 (61) Saarento, Silja silsaar@utu.fi 3-064 Sabatier, Colette colette.sabatier@u-bordeaux2.fr 3-065 Saczawa, Mary E. msaczawa@ufl.edu 2-005 (10), 2-060 (1), 3-026 Sadek, Shelly shelly.sadek@email.ucr.edu 2-042 (65), 4-041 (2) Sadler, Natalie nsadler@ucdavis.edu 4-058 (48) Saenz, Delia DELIA.SAENZ@asu.edu 2-024 (11) Saewyc, Elizabeth Elizabeth.Saewyc@nursing.ubc.ca 4-015, 4-021 Sagi-Schwartz, Abraham sagi@psy.haifa.ac.il 3-024 (12) Sahin, Basak sahinbasak@gmail.com 4-041 (28) Salas-Wright, Christopher wrightcu@bc.edu 3-051 (34) Saldarriaga Mesa, Lina Maria linasaldarriaga@gmail.com 4-023 (79) Salk, Rachel H. rachelsalk@gmail.com 3-024 (61) Salusky, Ida salusky1@illinois.edu 3-024 (18) Salvatore, Jessica E. salv0041@umn.edu 4-058 (58) Sam, David L. david.sam@psysp.uib.no 4-045 Samarin, Barbara bsamarin@uoguelph.ca 3-044 (30) Sanchez, Monica msanchez@clarku.edu 3-028, 3-028 Sbicigo, Juliana B. julianasbicigo@gmail.com 2-060 (66) Scalco, Matthew mscalco@buffalo.edu 3-024 (33) Scales, Christian rcscales@ucdavis.edu 2-005 (53) Scaramella, Laura V. lscarame@uno.edu 3-051 (5) Schachter, Elli elli.schachter@gmail.com 2-037 Sandstrom, Marlene marlene.sandstrom@williams.edu 3-036, 3-036, 3-063 Schad, Megan M. meganschad@virginia.edu 2-042 (55), 3-006 (56), 3-013, 3-024 (75), 4-005 (49), 4-041 (71) Sangalang, Cindy sangalan@ucla.edu 2-042 (29) Schaefer, David David.schaefer@asu.edu 2-050, 4-034 Sansbury, Brittany bssnsbry@memphis.edu 4-028 Schaefer, Mallary mallary.k.schaefer@ndsu.edu 2-005 (35) Santo, Jonathan B. jonathan.santo@gmail.com 2-005 (52), 2-075, 4-005 (54), 4-023 (27), 4-023 (68), 4-023 (79) Schall, Carol M. cmschall@vcu.edu 4-005 (26) Santos, António J. asantos@ispa.pt 2-060 (70) Santos, Carlos Carlos.E.Santos@asu.edu 3-006 (51), 3-025.5 Sargent, James James.D.Sargent@dartmouth.edu 2-054, 2-054 Satkowski, Laura lsatkowski1475@westfield.ma.edu 4-005 (73) Sauve, Jennifer jennifer.sauve@umit.maine.edu 2-060 (57), 4-023 (55) 170 Scharf, Miri scharfm@edu.haifa.ac.il 3-005, 3-005 Scherphof, Charlotte c.s.scherphof@uu.nl 3-051 (38) Schiffman, Rachel schiffma@uwm.edu 4-058 (17) Schlegel, Alice schlegel@email.arizona.edu 2-021 Schlimbach, Tabea schlimbach@dji.de 2-022, 2-022 Schoon, Ingrid ISchoon@ioe.ac.uk 2-064 Searcy, Yan ysearcy@csu.edu 4-046 Schlomer, Gabriel schlomer@email.arizona.edu 3-051 (13), 4-055 Schulenberg, John schulenb@isr.umich.edu 2-003, 2-003, 2-064, 4-007, 4-007 Sears, Heather hsears@unb.ca 2-005 (6), 3-044 (12), 4-058 (59) Schmid, Kristina L. Kristina.Schmid@tufts.edu 2-042 (77), 3-006 (15) Schulman, Rebecca Rebecca.k.schulman@gmail.com 3-044 (68) Sears, Meredith S. meredithsears@ucla.edu 3-029 Schmidt, Jennifer A. jaschmidt@niu.edu 2-060 (21), 3-044 (21) Schumann, Lyndall A. lyndall.schumann@queensu.ca 2-005 (42) Seaton, Cherisse seaton@unbc.ca 3-024 (79) Schmidt, Michelle E. mschmidt@moravian.edu 2-024 (47) Schwab, Joseph R. jschwab@clarku.edu 3-024 (78) Seaton, Eleanor eseaton@unc.edu 4-043 Schmidt, Sara C. sara.c.schmidt@gmail.com 4-058 (63) Schwartz, David davschw@usc.edu 3-051 (41), 4-005 (41) Seay, Nancy P. nancy.seay@utoledo.edu 2-060 (27) Schmitt-Wilson, Sarah sarahschmittwilson@gmail.com 2-042 (22), 3-051 (26) Schwartz, Kelly D. kdschwar@ucalgary.ca 4-025, 4-025 Sebanc, Anne asebanc@whittier.edu 3-051 (46) Schneider, Barbara L. bschneid@msu.edu 2-074 Schwartz, Orli orli@unimelb.edu.au 2-012 Secor-Turner, Molly molly.secor-turner@ndsu.edu 3-002 Schneider, Barry H. barry@uottawa.ca 3-065, 3-065 Schwartz, Sarah E. Sarah.Schwartz@gmail.com 4-041 (67), 4-046, 4-067, 4-067 Seegan, Paige L. paige.seegan.892@my.csun.edu 2-024 (45) Schneider, Cynthia L. cschneider@austin.utexas.edu 3-051 (2) Schwartz, Seth J. SSchwartz@med.miami.edu 2-016, 2-051, 2-051, 2-060 (54) Segal, Nancy L. nsegal@fullerton.edu 3-009 Schnoll, Jessica jschnoll@yorku.ca 4-023 (44) Schwartz-Mette, Rebecca MetteR@missouri.edu 3-048, 3-048, 4-039 Seider, Scott seider@bu.edu 2-007 Schnurr, Melissa schnurrm@uwgb.edu 3-051 (54), 4-004 Schwartzman, Alex E. alex.schwartzman@concordia.ca 2-042 (41), 3-006 (71), 4-023 (12) Seiffge-Krenke, Inge seiffge@uni-mainz.de 2-046 Schoeny, Michael mschoeny@chapinhall.org 2-071, 3-004, 3-011, 4-022, 4-022 Schwerdtfeger, Kami kami.schwerdtfeger@okstate.edu 4-041 (23) Sekiguchi, Yuichi yseki@human.tsukuba.ac.jp 2-005 (69) Scholte, Ron r.scholte@bsi.ru.nl 2-024 (51) Scott, Alicia R. alicia.richmond@hhs.gov 3-051 (36) Sellers, Robert rsellers@umich.edu 2-010 Schonert-Reichl, Kimberly A. kimberly.schonert-reichl@ubc.ca 3-044 (77), 4-023 (53), 4-025, 4-058 (3) Scott, Brandon bgscott@uno.edu 3-044 (73) Sen, Hilal hilalshen@gmail.com 4-023 (42) Scott, Mark D. mscott3@vt.edu 3-024 (76) Sengal, Amena ags341@nyu.edu 3-016 Schooler, Deborah deborah.schooler@gallaudet.edu 2-042 (34) 171 Senguttuvan, Umadevi umadevi.sen@gmail.com 4-005 (14), 4-057, 3-051 (14) Sharp, Carla csharp2@uh.edu 3-023, 3-023 Shields, Ann M. shieldsa@umich.edu 4-005 (9), 4-030 Senyshyn, Yaroslav senyshyn@sfu.ca 2-031 Sharp, Erin H. erin.sharp@unh.edu 4-041 (17) Shim, Soyeon shim@ag.arizona.edu 2-042 (39) Serafini, Kelly serafk@spu.edu 2-005 (66), 3-006 (33) Shavit Miller, Anat milleris@netvision.net.il 2-032 Shin, Huiyoung shinhy@umich.edu 4-041 (52), 4-058 (55) Serbin, Lisa A. lisa.serbin@concordia.ca 2-042 (41), 3-006 (71), 4-023 (12) Shaw, Daniel S. casey@pitt.edu 2-005 (71), 2-030, 3-051 (5) Shindorf, Zachary R. shindozr@muohio.edu 4-005 (51) Serek, Jan serek@fss.muni.cz 2-027, 2-027, 4-058 (27) Shaw, Leigh A. lshaw@weber.edu 4-005 (39) Shipley, Leandra lshipley@spu.edu 2-005 (66) Serido, Joyce jserido@email.arizona.edu 2-068 Sheeber, Lisa lsheeber@ori.org 2-012, 3-006 (59) Shirley, Mariela C. shirleym@mail.nih.gov 2-006 (G7), 3-042 Serpell, Robert robertnserpell@gmail.com 2-076, 3-043 Sheehan, Mary m.sheehan@qut.edu.au 4-023 (67) Shirtcliff, Elizabeth birdie.shirtcliff@uno.edu 2-012, 2-012, 3-052 Shafer, Autumn autumn.shafer@ttu.edu 3-008 Sheehan, Michael J. Michael.Sheehan@quinnipiac.edu 3-024 (41), 3-044 (68) Shlafer, Rebecca shlaf002@umn.edu 3-044 (56) Shahid, Saba sshahid@loyola.edu 3-044 (44) Shen, Yuh-Ling syuhling@hotmail.com 2-024 (74) Short, Kathy kathy.short@hwdsb.on.ca 2-024 (42) Shaine, Megan J. megan.shaine@gmail.com 2-005 (60) Shenk, Chad chad.shenk@cchmc.org 3-006 (84), 3-044 (31) Shortt, Joann W. joanns@oslc.org 3-006 (45), 3-006 (59), 4-004, 4-044, 4-057 Shamah, Devora shamahd@gatewaytocollege.org 4-041 (15) Shepard, Allison aeshep12@g.holycross.edu 4-058 (19) Shaman, Nicholas J. nsham003@ucr.edu 4-023 (76) Sheppard, Adam adam.sheppard@uci.edu 4-056 Shapero, Benjamin G. benjamin.shapero@temple.edu 2-036, 3-067, 4-047, 4-047 Sher-Censor, Efrat esher@psy.haifa.ac.il 3-024 (12) Shapiro, Lauren A. lashapir@ucsc.edu 2-024 (63) Sherman, Amanda amanda.sherman@utoronto.ca 3-051 (73) Shapka, Jennifer D. jennifer.shapka@ubc.ca 3-031, 3-031, 4-005 (1) Sherman, Emma L. emmas3@uw.edu 4-023 (66) Sharabany, Ruth ruthsh@psy.haifa.ac.il 2-032 Sherrod, Lonnie R. sherrod@srcd.org 3-020 172 Shoulberg, Erin K. erin.shoulberg@uvm.edu 3-044 (52), 3-051 (52), 4-058 (6) Shreffler, Karina karina.shreffler@okstate.edu 4-041 (23) Shuey, Elizabeth elizabeth.shuey@tufts.edu 2-039 Shulman, Shmuel shmuel.shulman@biu.ac.il 2-046, 2-046, 2-074, 2-074 Shumka, Ellen ellenshumka@hotmail.com 3-027 Shumow, Lee Lshumow@gmail.com 2-060 (21), 3-044 (21) Shure, Marc B. schurem@onid.orst.edu 2-053 Simmons, Samantha sjsimmons@ucla.edu 2-024 (54), 3-024 (53), 4-005 (53) Skinner, Martie skinnm@uw.edu 2-067 Siegel, Jason jason.siegel@cgu.edu 4-058 (5) Simon, Thomas tgs9@cdc.gov 4-022 Skoog, Alexandra akbs@umich.edu 2-024 (75) Siegel, Rebecca rebecca_siegel@med.unc.edu 2-024 (43) Simon, Valerie vsimon@wayne.edu 3-006 (55), 4-005 (4), 4-070 Skorupski, William wps@ku.edu 2-050, 3-019 Siegle, Greg gsiegle@pitt.edu 2-030 Simons, Leslie G. lgsimons@uga.edu 2-024 (36), 4-058 (57) Slavec, Janine Janine.Slavec@umit.maine.edu 4-023 (55) Sierksma, Jellie j.sierksma@uu.nl 4-041 (53) Simons, Ronald rsimons@uga.edu 2-071 Sleightholm, Melissa slei1320@mylaurier.ca 2-042 (24) Sijtsema, Jelle j.j.sijtsema@rug.nl 3-006 (65), 3-027, 3-033 Simonson, Jordan simonson@spu.edu 2-042 (84), 3-034, 4-035 Slesnick, Natasha nslesnick@ehe.osu.edu 2-024 (66), 3-044 (6), 4-058 (11) Silbereisen, Rainer sii@uni-jena.de 3-015, 4-007 Simpkins, Sandi sandra.simpkins@asu.edu 2-050, 2-068, 3-019, 4-034, 4-056, 4056 Slingluff, Jamie jslinglu@poets.whittier.edu 3-051 (46) Silk, Jennifer S. silkj@upmc.edu 2-030, 3-024 (58), 3-024 (71), 4-030 Silveira, Stephanie silveira.s@husky.neu.edu 2-060 (3) Silverman, Paul paul.silverman@mso.umt.edu 3-006 (11) Silverthorn, Naida naida@uic.edu 2-053 Sim, Leslie A. Sim.leslie@mayo.edu 3-051 (70) Sim, Tick-Ngee psysimtn@nus.edu.sg 2-024 (81), 3-024 (20) Simard, Melissa R. mel.simard@gmail.com 2-005 (72), 2-060 (71), 3-051 (58) Simmons, Julian jgs@unimelb.edu.au 2-012 Simmons, Kerry kerry.simmons@cchmc.org 3-006 (84) Simpson, Jeffry A. simps108@umn.edu 4-058 (58) Sims, Alexandra asims1@tulane.edu 4-023 (62) Sinclair, Katerina O. kos1@email.arizona.edu 3-010.5, 3-010.5, 3-024 (82), 3-034 Sinclair, Ryan sinclairr1@gmail.com 4-058 (61) Siqueira, Aline C. alinecsiq@gmail.com 4-023 (15) Sirin, Selcuk sirins@nyu.edu 2-042 (27), 2-042 (61), 3-024 (25) Sisson, Laura-Nicole lns38@cornell.edu 3-051 (18) Skidmore, Chloe chloe.skidmore@psych.utah.edu 2-024 (1), 4-003 Skinner, Ellen A. skinnere@pdx.edu 2-044, 3-006 (21), 4-005 (21) 173 Sloper, Michelle michelle.sloper@cgu.edu 2-024 (24) Small, Phillip J. pjsmall88@gmail.com 4-023 (34) Smashnaya, Sviatlana smashnaya@gmail.com 4-058 (28) Smetana, Judi smetana@psych.rochester.edu 2-070, 3-051 (8), 4-002 Smiler, Andrew P. irwinsap@wfu.edu 2-024 (84), 2-061, 4-041 (25) Smiley, Patricia A. patricia.smiley@pomona.edu 3-051 (7) Smith, Annie annie@mcs.bc.ca 2-005 (41) Smith, Ashley R. ashley.r.smith@temple.edu 3-063 Smith, Caitlin caitlias@usc.edu 3-024 (34) Smith, David David.Smith@uottawa.ca 2-060 (42) Smith, David V. david.v.smith@duke.edu 2-005 (77) Smith, Edward eas8@psu.edu 4-007 Smith, Elliott D. elliott.d.smith@gmail.com 4-041 (78) Smith, Erin I. esmith@calbaptist.edu 3-044 (3) Smith, Lauren smith.lauren91@gmail.com 4-041 (30) Smith, Megan L. meganlsmith04@yahoo.com 3-044 (84) Smith, Rhiannon L. rhiannon.smith@uconn.edu 3-007, 3-007, 3-048 Smith, Sydney S. sydneyssmith1288@gmail.com 4-023 (62) Smith-Bynum, Mia A. msbynum@umd.edu 4-043, 4-043 Snapp, Shannon sdsnapp@gmail.com 2-042 (37) Snijders, Tom Tom.Snijders@nuffield.ox.ac.uk 4-034 Snijders, Tom A. t.a.b.snijders@rug.nl 4-072 Snyder, James james.snyder@wichita.edu 4-044, 4-058 (61) Socholotiuk, Krista ksocholotiuk@hotmail.com 4-005 (65) Sockwell, Latunja LRSockwell@uams.edu 4-058 (7) Soenens, Bart bart.soenens@ugent.be 2-024 (70), 3-005, 4-013 Spencer, Margaret B. mbspencer@uchicago.edu 3-025.5 Sokol, Robert J. rsokol@med.wayne.edu 2-003 Spencer, Renee rspenc@bu.edu 4-041 (63), 4-046, 4-067 Solis, Jessica M. jmsolis@unc.edu 4-041 (9) Spies, Lauren lspies@usc.edu 2-060 (65), 4-058 (52) Solmeyer, Anna ars293@psu.edu 3-044 (63), 4-057, 4-057 Spilker, Ann acs4a@virginia.edu 2-042 (56), 3-041, 3-067, 4-005 (49), 4-041 (71) Solomon, Elizabeth liz.solomon@gmail.com 3-044 (4) Somers, Cheryl L. c.somers@wayne.edu 2-005 (37) Sommer, Simon M. simon.sommer@jacobsfoundation.org 2-006 (G8), 3-042 Song, Xiao xsong@uga.edu 4-004 Spitzer, Brian J. brianjspitzer@gmail.com 4-062 Spivak, Asha L. aspivak@ucla.edu 2-024 (54) Spotts, Erica L. spottse@mail.nih.gov 3-009 Staats, Sarah sarahbethmoorman@gmail.com 4-058 (61) Sontag-Padilla, Lisa M. lsontag@rand.org 3-026, 3-026, 4-005 (38), 4-023 (1) Sorensen, Carl sorensec@email.sc.edu 3-006 (18), 4-023 (16) Sorkhabi, Nadia nadia.sorkhabi@sjsu.edu 2-042 (10), 3-051 (21) Soto, Daniel W. danielws@usc.edu 2-051 Soucie, Kendall dy6695@wayne.edu 2-033 Spaeth, Michael Michael.Spaeth@uni-jena.de 4-007 Speidel, Carolyn cspeidel@buffalo.edu 3-006 (73), 3-024 (32) Spellings, Carolyn cspellings@gmail.com 1-007, 2-042.5, 3-012, 4-029 174 Stack, Dale M. dale.stack@concordia.ca 2-042 (41), 3-006 (71), 4-023 (12) Staff, Jeremy jus25@psu.edu 2-003, 2-064, 4-007 Stagner, Matthew mstagner@chapinhall.org 3-018 Stalder, Barbara E. barbara.stalder@unibas.ch 2-022 Stange, Jonathan P. jstange@temple.edu 3-006 (77), 3-051 (1), 4-047, 4-047 Stanton, Cassandra Cassandra_Stanton@brown.edu 2-024 (39) Stark, Tobias t.h.stark@rug.nl 2-038, 4-041 (27), 4-061 Stattin, Håkan hakan.stattin@oru.se 3-019, 3-063, 4-050 175 Stearns, Katherine stearns.kate@gmail.com 2-005 (2) Steeger, Christine M. cguasto@nd.edu 4-041 (7) Steele, Ryan D. steel141@umn.edu 4-058 (58) Stefanucci, Jeanine jeanine.stefanucci@psych.utah.edu 2-024 (1), 4-003 Steglich, Christian c.e.g.steglich@rug.nl 3-044 (51), 3-058 Stein, Judith A. jastein@ucla.edu 4-041 (6) Steinberg, Elizabeth A. elizabeth.steinberg1@temple.edu 4-024 Stey, Paul C. pstey@nd.edu 2-005 (3), 2-018, 2-024 (20), 2-024 (34), 4-005 (62), 4-013 Sticca, Fabio brosticca@hotmail.com 3-024 (43) Sticca, Fabio sticca@jacobscenter.uzh.ch 3-031, 4-072 Strati, Anna annastrati@gmail.com 3-044 (21) Strauman, Timothy tjstraum@duke.edu 2-005 (77) Streit, Cara csck9@mail.missouri.edu 2-060 (54) Stright, Anne D. astright@indiana.edu 2-042 (70), 2-042 (72) Stinnett, Alec astinnet@niu.edu 2-005 (50) Stockdale, Gary gstockdale@ucdavis.edu 4-005 (34) Stockwell, Timothy timstock@uvic.ca 3-044 (64) Stoddard, Sarah sastodda@umich.edu 3-003 Strobel, Karen R. strobe@stanford.edu 3-062, 3-062, 3-062 Stump, Kathryn knstump@ku.edu 2-024 (53) Su, Tina tfsu@uvic.ca 3-044 (81) Suarez-Orozco, Carola cso2@nyu.edu 2-042 (61), 3-006 (30), 3-024 (25) Steinberg, Laurence lds@temple.edu 2-025, 2-060 (51), 3-024 (56), 3-063, 4-024, 4-024, 4-065 Stone, Deborah zaf9@cdc.gov 2-072 Stephens, Skye skye.stephens@psych.ryerson.ca 3-041 Stoolmiller, Mike mikes@oslc.org 2-054 Stern, Darren ds35@nova.edu 2-042 (75) Storer, Heather L. hlstorer@uw.edu 4-023 (66) Sterrett, Emma M. emma.sterrett@louisville.edu 3-011, 3-011 Storksdieck, Martin mstorksdieck@nas.edu 3-017 Stevens, Kristopher kstevens@pacificclinics.org 2-048 Stormshak, Elizabeth bstorm@uoregon.edu 2-025, 2-042 (12), 3-051 (65) Stevens, Sally sstevens@email.arizona.edu 3-014 Stouthamer-Loeber, Magda stouthamerloeberm@msx.upmc.edu 4-005 (68) Stewart, David G. davidste@spu.edu 2-005 (66), 2-042 (33), 3-006 (33) Strage, Amy amy.strage@sjsu.edu 3-051 (21) Stewart, Katherine katherine.stewart21@gmail.com 3-044 (9) Strasburger, Victor vstrasburger@salud.unm.edu 1-001 Stewart, Sherry H. sherry.stewart@dal.ca 4-016 Strathearn, Lane lanes@bcm.edu 3-023 176 Sue, Joanna L. 3js21@queensu.ca 3-044 (70) Sugimura, Niwako niwako@illinois.edu 3-024 (18) Suizzo, Marie-Anne marie.suizzo@mail.utexas.edu 3-051 (11), 4-058 (26) Sukhawathanakul, Paweena paweenas@uvic.ca 2-071, 3-006 (34), 4-053 Sulaiman, Crystalia csulaiman11@gmail.com 2-005 (16), 2-024 (16), 2-051 Sullivan, Terri N. tnsulliv@vcu.edu 4-017 Sully, Laura laura.sully@kcl.ac.uk 4-016 Summers, Jessica J. jsummers@email.arizona.edu 3-024 (24) Swinton, Akilah akilah@live.unc.edu 2-024 (22), 4-018 Tanaka, Teri tatanaka@ucdavis.edu 2-005 (53) Sumner, Rachel ras525@cornell.edu 4-041 (26) Sy, Megan megan.sy@gmail.com 3-024 (81) Tanaku, Kirtana ktanuku@gmail.com 4-023 (6) Sun, Shixiu sunshixiu@126.com 2-005 (62), 3-006 (58), 4-023 (63), 4058 (65) Sy, Susan susansy@fullerton.edu 4-023 (22) Tang, Chuanyi chuanyi.tang@warrington.ufl.edu 2-042 (39) Syed, Moin moin@umn.edu 4-023 (78), 4-036, 4-036, 4-049.5 Tang, Julia jctang@gmail.com 3-006 (24), 4-058 (5) Synyak, Kateryna syny2670@mylaurier.ca 2-024 (58) Tanielian, Terri terri_tanielian@rand.org 4-055 Syvertsen, Amy Amy.Syvertsen@gmail.com 2-024 (25), 3-012 Tanner, Lindsay ldg424@gmail.com 3-051 (21) Sutherland, Olga osutherl@uoguelph.ca 2-005 (80) Szwedo, David E. dszwedo@virginia.edu 2-042 (55), 3-013, 3-013, 3-041, 4-041 (71), 4-063 Tannock, Rosemary rosemary.tannock@utoronto.ca 3-051 (59) Swan, Anna annajswan@gmail.com 2-055 Séguin, Jean R. jean.seguin@umontreal.ca 3-006 (39), 3-044 (1) Swannell, Sarah s.swannell@uq.edu.au 4-041 (64) Tagliabue, Semira semira.tagliabue@unicatt.it 4-058 (9) Swartz, Teresa tswartz@umn.edu 4-020 Tai, Sara J. sara.j.tai@manchester.ac.uk 4-047 Swearer, Susan sswearer@unlserve.unl.edu 3-027 Tailor, Megha mtailor@depaul.edu 2-034 Sweeting, Helen helen@sphsu.mrc.ac.uk 2-054 Tak, Yuli R. yulitak@gmail.com 2-042 (59), 3-024 (46), 4-058 (69) Sweiss, Lina linasweiss@gmail.com 4-025, 4-058 (3) Takanishi, Ruby ruby@fcd-us.org 3-012, 3-043 Swenson, Lance P. lswenson@suffolk.edu 2-042 (47), 2-060 (34), 4-063 Talley, Anna E. talley.ae@gmail.com 2-042 (35) Swenson, Theodora tswenson@bu.edu 4-023 (65) Tan, Connie cswtan@gmail.com 4-032, 4-032 Swindle, Taren M. tswindle@uams.edu 4-058 (7) Tan, Joseph S. jtan@haverford.edu 3-044 (61), 4-005 (67) Supple, Andrew asupple@uncg.edu 3-006 (81) Surjadi, Florensia F. ffsurjadi@gmail.com 4-038 Susman, Elizabeth esusman@psu.edu 2-012, 4-023 (1), 4-073 Tao, Karen k.tao@utah.edu 2-066 Tapscott, Brian E. brian.e.tapscott@gmail.com 3-006 (76) Taraba, Sheree staraba@asu.edu 2-068 Tasker, Timothy B. ttaske2@uic.edu 4-058 (33) Tavernier, Royette rt09la@brocku.ca 4-058 (68) Taylor, Andrew ataylor@teenhealthcentre.com 3-024 (45) 177 Taylor, Erin K. ekt3k5@mail.mizzou.edu 2-042 (9) Taylor, Geneviève genevieve.taylor@mail.mcgill.ca 2-042 (57) Taylor, Ronald D. rdtaylor@temple.edu 2-042 (6), 3-044 (10) Tein, Jenn-Yun atjyt@asu.edu 3-030 Thompson, Elisabeth M. elisabeth.morgan.thompson@gmail.com 3-010.5, 3-010.5, 3-014 Tilghman-Osborne, Emile M. emt5157@psu.edu 2-005 (46), 3-051 (30) Telzer, Eva H. ehtelzer@ucla.edu 2-025, 4-058 (30) Thompson, Geneene N. gthomps3@illinois.edu 3-024 (29) Tilley, Elizabeth H. etilley@email.arizona.edu 3-024 (5) Temple, Jeff R. jetemple@utmb.edu 2-024 (46) Thompson, Kara D. murrayk@uvic.ca 3-024 (22), 3-041, 3-044 (64) Tilton-Weaver, Lauree lauree.tilton-weaver@oru.se 2-060 (7), 3-043, 3-063, 4-002, 4-050, 4-050 Teo, Lin I Deborah lit690@mail.harvard.edu 4-011 Thompson, Keilah A. keilah.thompson@ndsu.edu 4-058 (18) Teppers, Eveline eveline.teppers@psy.kuleuven.be 2-005 (74) Thompson, Mamie mamie_crook777@hotmail.com 4-041 (70) ter Bogt, Tom F. t.f.m.terbogt@uu.nl 2-042 (50) Thompson, Sanna SannaThompson@mail.utexas.edu 2-024 (49), 3-044 (62) Testa, Maria testa@ria.buffalo.edu 3-051 (44) Thompson, Stephanie F. sfengler@u.washington.edu 3-024 (63) Tewksbury, Elise elise.tewksbury001@umb.edu 3-024 (64) Thorkildsen, Theresa A. thork@uic.edu 2-005 (75) Thapar, Anita Thapar@cardiff.ac.uk 3-009 Thorn, Amanda amanda.thorn771@topper.wku.edu 3-033 Thigpen, Jennifer jenni.thigpen@vanderbilt.edu 2-004 Thorne, Avril avril@ucsc.edu 2-019, 2-037 Thijs, Jochem j.t.thijs@uu.nl 2-070, 4-041 (53) Thornhill, Kierstin kierstinj@msn.com 2-005 (48) Thoma, Brian b.thoma@utah.edu 2-024 (83) Thorp, Elizabeth eat7@geneseo.edu 2-060 (50) Thomas, April G. april.michelle.thomas@gmail.com 3-015, 3-044 (65) Thulen, Joke j.thulen@erasmusmc.nl 4-042 Thomas, Kathleen thoma114@umn.edu 4-005 (77) Tiberio, Stacey staceyt@oslc.org 4-004, 4-057 Thomas, Virginia vdthomas@ucsc.edu 4-005 (80) Tiffany, Jennifer S. jst5@cornell.edu 3-024 (16), 4-058 (39) Thomason, Jessie jessiedt4@yahoo.com 4-008 Tiggelman, Dana d.tiggelman@pwo.ru.nl 4-041 (35), 4-041 (75) Tissot, Abbigail abbigail.tissot@cchmc.org 3-006 (64), 4-023 (1) To, Sharon sharonto@gmail.com 4-058 (10) Tobin, Renee rmtobin@ilstu.edu 2-060 (75) Todd, Maureen maureen.todd@huskers.unl.edu 4-041 (14) Toews, Michelle L. mtoews@txstate.edu 2-005 (5), 3-006 (36) Tolan, Patrick H. pht6t@virginia.edu 2-028, 2-034, 2-071, 3-004, 3-004, 3004, 3-011, 4-022 Tolman, Deborah dtolman@hunter.cuny.edu 3-049, 4-049 Tomek, Sara stomek@bamaed.ua.edu 4-028 Tompkins, Tanya L. tatompki@linfield.edu 4-058 (32) Tompsett, Carolyn cjtomps@bgsu.edu 2-042 (15), 2-060 (61), 3-044 (34), 3044 (40), 4-005 (70) Tong, Janet jpytong@unimelb.edu.au 2-012 Toomey, Russell B. russell.toomey@asu.edu 2-051, 2-060 (68), 3-061, 4-041 (81) Toplak, Maggie mtoplak@yorku.ca 3-051 (59) 178 Torney-Purta, Judith jtpurta@umd.edu 4-023 (24) Trinh, Nancy M. nancytrinh2003@yahoo.com 3-006 (8) Tucker-Drob, Elliot M. tuckerdrob@psy.utexas.edu 2-042 (19) Torres, Marisela Marisela.Torres@asu.edu 2-024 (27) Trinh, Sarah L. sltrinh@umich.edu 2-061 Tucker-Halpern, Carolyn carolyn_halpern@unc.edu 3-051 (31), 4-005 (28) Torressen, Christine torressen.c@husky.neu.edu 2-060 (3) Troilo, Jessica E. jessica.troilo@mail.wvu.edu 4-058 (31) Tugenberg, Toni tonit@bu.edu 4-046 Tortolero, Susan Susan.Tortolero@uth.tmc.edu 2-024 (46) Troop-Gordon, Wendy Wendy.Troop@ndsu.edu 2-014, 2-044, 3-022, 4-023 (47) Tuggle, Felicia J. fjt0001@tigermail.auburn.edu 4-041 (66) Toth, Sheree L. Sheree_toth@urmc.rochester.edu 3-051 (4) Troy, Lauren E. ltroy@psych.udel.edu 2-042 (63) Tulane, Sarah sarah.tulane@usu.edu 3-006 (83), 4-023 (30) Trach, Jessica jtrach@gmail.com 2-060 (42), 3-027 Trucco, Elisa M. emtrucco@buffalo.edu 2-028, 2-028, 3-006 (75), 3-024 (33) Tung, Michael michael.tung@queensu.ca 2-024 (71) Trainum, Julie jtrainum@yst.org 4-058 (40) Truong, Diana ttruong@uoguelph.ca 4-023 (8) Turnbull, Marsha marshat@wsu.edu 2-005 (83) Tran, Steve steveptran@gmail.com 3-024 (27), 4-056 Trzesniewski, Kali ktrz@ucdavis.edu 4-023 (19) Turner, Linda J. turnerj@missouri.edu 2-005 (78) Trant, Tim ttrant@connect.carleton.ca 3-024 (48) Tsai, Kim M. kimtsai@ucla.edu 4-058 (30) Turner, Rhonda sswearernapolitano@unl.edu 3-027 Travers, Lea leatravers@gmail.com 2-024 (18) Tsar, Vasilinka vtsar048@uottawa.ca 4-005 (61) Tuskenis, Elena Elena.Tuskenis@uchospitals.edu 4-058 (37) Treadwell, Kimberli kimberli.treadwell@uconn.edu 3-006 (49) Tschann, Jeanne M. tschannj@healthpsych.ucsf.edu 3-051 (35), 4-041 (55) Tuvblad, Catherine Tuvblad@usc.edu 3-009 Trejos-Castillo, Elizabeth elizabeth.trejos@ttu.edu 3-024 (59) Tu, Kelly kmt0009@tigermail.auburn.edu 4-027 Tweed, Roger G. rogergt@gmail.com 4-058 (20) Tremblay, Richard E. richard.ernest.tremblay@umontreal.ca 3-006 (39), 3-044 (1) Tubbs, Carly carly.tubbs@nyu.edu 4-071, 4-071 Tynan, Joshua froologist@aol.com 2-005 (37) Trent, Maria E. mtrent2@jhmi.edu 4-023 (36) Tubman, Jonathan jtubman@American.edu 3-051 (10) Tynes, Brendesha brendesha.tynes@gmail.com 2-045, 4-058 (75) Trentacosta, Christopher chris.trentacosta@wayne.edu 2-005 (71) Tucker, Corinna J. c.j.tucker@unh.edu 4-041 (17) Tyrell, Fanita A. Fanita.Tyrell@asu.edu 2-005 (55) Trickett, Penelope K. pennyt@usc.edu 2-048, 2-048, 2-048, 4-041 (1), 4-058 (4) Tucker, Joan jtucker@rand.org 3-058, 3-058 Uldricks, Jennifer uldrij@acgov.org 2-066 179 Umaña-Taylor, Adriana Adriana.Umana-Taylor@asu.edu 2-024 (27), 2-024 (28), 2-029, 2-051, 2-060 (54), 2-077, 3-025.5, 3-044 (14), 3-051 (28), 4-005 (27), 4-023 (9), 4-041 (81) Underwood, Marion K. undrwd@utdallas.edu 2-042 (69) Unger, Jennifer B. unger@usc.edu 2-051 Upadhyaya, Katja kmarian@umich.edu 4-033 Updegraff, Kimberly A. kimberly.updegraff@asu.edu 2-005 (79), 2-029, 2-051, 2-060 (53), 3-025.5, 3-044 (14), 3-051 (28), 4-005 (27), 4-023 (9), 4-041 (81) Upton, Rachel rupton@email.unc.edu 4-018 Urban, Jessica urba5900@stthomas.edu 2-060 (74) Vaden-Kiernan, Michael michael.vaden-kiernan@sedl.org 4-058 (77) Vaillancourt, Tracy tracy.vaillancourt@uottawa.ca 2-002, 2-024 (42), 3-022, 3-022, 3022, 3-044 (41), 4-005 (61) Vaillant, George E. gvaillant@partners.org 4-048 Valentiner, David P. dvalentiner@niu.edu 4-061 Valenzuela, Cristina cdvalen1@uc.cl 2-060 (16) van Aken, Marcel M.A.G.vanAken@uu.nl 2-022, 2-042 (14), 2-042 (76), 3-037 Van Baaren, Rick R.VanBaaren@psych.ru.nl 2-005 (39) van Bergen, Diana D. DD.van.Bergen@psy.vu.nl 3-040 Van Boxtel, Anton H. a.vanboxtel@uvt.nl 2-024 (73) Van Eck, Kathryn vaneck.k@gmail.com 4-058 (63) Van Campen, Kali kalivc@email.arizona.edu 3-014, 3-014 Van Egeren, Laurie A. vanegere@msu.edu 2-013, 3-044 (26), 4-058 (70) van de Bongardt, Daphne D.vandeBongardt@uu.nl 2-005 (38), 3-006 (37) van Goethem, Anne A. 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P. onno.vanschayck@maastricht university.nl 4-041 (35) Van der Giessen, Daniëlle d.vandergiessen@uu.nl 3-044 (49), 4-030 van der Graaff, Jolien j.vandergraaff@uu.nl 2-024 (73), 4-012 van der Schoot, Menno m.vander.schoot@vu.nl 2-014 Van der Vorst, Haske h.vandervorst@pwo.ru.nl 4-005 (32), 4-023 (32) van Duijn, Marijtje A. m.a.j.van.duijn@rug.nl 4-072 van Dulmen, Manfred H. M. mvandul@kent.edu 1-005 180 Van Voorhees, Benjamin bvanvoor@uic.edu 4-051, 4-051 Van Wie, Michael michaelvanwie@gmail.com 2-055 Van Zundert, Rinka M. R.vanZundert@pwo.ru.nl 2-042 (59), 4-058 (69) Vandell, Deborah dvandell@uci.edu 4-023 (17) Vander Stoep, Ann annv@u.washington.edu 2-009, 2-036, 3-044 (39), 3-068, 4-005 (58), 4-035, 4-041 (59) VanGundy, Karen karen.vangundy@unh.edu 4-041 (17) VanSlyke, Emily evanslyke@ucla.edu 3-024 (53) Vergara-Lopez, Chrystal cvergara@buffalo.edu 3-044 (58) Vitoroulis, Irene irene.vitoroulis@uottawa.ca 3-044 (41) Vansteenkiste, Maarten maarten.vansteenkiste@ugent.be 2-024 (70), 3-005 Vergnani, Tania tvergnani@uwc.ac.za 4-007 Vitulano, Michael L. mvitulan@utk.edu 2-024 (68) Vargas, Danyel A. danyelvargas@gmail.com 4-058 (12) Verhagen, Maaike M.Verhagen@bsi.ru.nl 2-065 Vivolo, Alana M. goz4@cdc.gov 2-072 Vargas Lascano, Dayuma I. vargasla@ualberta.ca 4-058 (78) Verhulst, Frank C. f.verhulst@erasmusmc.nl 3-006 (2), 4-042 Vlahovicova, Kristina k.vlahovic@gmail.com 2-060 (12) Varner, Fatima fvarner@umich.edu 2-059 Verkuyten, Maykel M.Verkuyten@uu.nl 2-070, 4-041 (27), 4-041 (53) Voeten, Marinus M.Voeten@pwo.ru.nl 3-064 Vasalampi, Kati kati.vasalampi@jyu.fi 2-074 Vernon, Lynette A. l.vernon@murdoch.edu.au 3-051 (83) Vogel-Ciernia, Laura Laura.Vogel-Ciernia@ndsu.edu 2-014 Vasilenko, Sara A. svasilenko@psu.edu 2-017, 2-060 (56), 3-024 (37), 4-010, 4-010, 4-010 Veríssimo, Manuela mveriss@ispa.pt 2-060 (70) Volk, Karon kvolk@uwyo.edu 3-024 (55), 3-044 (55), 3-051 (55) Vest, Andrea E. andrea.vest@asu.edu 2-068, 3-019, 3-044 (16), 4-034, 4-056 Vollebergh, Wilma w.a.m.vollebergh@uu.nl 2-005 (39), 3-006 (2), 3-024 (39), 3044 (51), 3-051 (38) Vasquez, Yolanda E. yolie.vasquez@gmail.com 3-006 (19) Vaterlaus, J. M. mitch.v@aggiemail.usu.edu 3-006 (83) Vaughn, Michael mvaughn9@slu.edu 3-051 (34) Veenstra, Amy du4417@wayne.edu 3-051 (19) Veenstra, Rene d.r.veenstra@rug.nl 1-001.5, 3-006 (65), 3-044 (51), 4-023 (50), 4-041 (27), 4-061, 4-069, 4-072, 4-072 Veits, Gina gveits@bgsu.edu 2-060 (61) Velazquez, Cayley E. cayleywarner@mail.utexas.edu 4-005 (12) Velez, Paulina paulina.velez@ttu.edu 3-024 (59) Verduzco, Christine cverduzc@poets.whittier.edu 3-051 (46) Vettern, Rachelle Rachelle.Vettern@ndsu.edu 3-002 Vignoles, Anna a.vignoles@ioe.ac.uk 2-064 Viljoen, Jodi jviljoen@sfu.ca 2-060 (77), 4-023 (75), 4-058 (20) Villalobos, Myriam myriam@psych.rochester.edu 2-070 Villamar, Juan A. JVillamar2@med.miami.edu 2-051 Vinson, Jenna jennav@email.arizona.edu 3-014 Visconti, Kari kari.visconti@asu.edu 2-014 Vitaro, Frank frank.vitaro@umontreal.ca 3-006 (39), 3-044 (1), 4-039, 4-041 (37) 181 Vollet, Justin W. jwv@pdx.edu 4-041 (51) von der Lippe, Holger holger.vonderlippe@ovgu.de 2-042 (51) Vosylis, Rimantas rvosylis@gmail.com 2-024 (50) Vuchinich, Samuel vuchinis@oregonstate.edu 2-053 Vyas, Amita N. avyas@gwu.edu 4-023 (36) Vytasek, Jovita M. jvytasek@gmail.com 2-060 (7), 4-005 (3), 4-023 (3) Wadsworth, Martha Martha.Wadsworth@du.edu 2-004, 2-004, 2-020 Wagner, Briana brianaeve@gmail.com 4-058 (44) Wagner, Clara A. clara.wagner@temple.edu 4-047 Walters, Tracy L. tracy.walters.niu@gmail.com 4-005 (29) Warren, Michelle P. mpw1@columbia.edu 3-026 Wagoner, Andrew andrew.wagoner@tufts.edu 2-039 Walther, Christine A. cap63@pitt.edu 2-060 (40) Washburn, Jason J. j-washburn@northwestern.edu 2-060 (58) Wainryb, Cecilia wainryb@psych.utah.edu 2-042 (74) Walton, Marsha D. walton@rhodes.edu 2-005 (58) Washington, LaTesha griffit3@illinois.edu 2-013 Walden, Nicole J. njw230@nyu.edu 4-011 Wang, Jun jun.wang@colostate.edu 4-030 Wasonga, Teresa twasonga@niu.edu 3-044 (21) Walker, Gabriela gwalker4@illinois.edu 2-045 Wang, Li liwang@pku.edu.cn 4-031 Wasserman Lieb, Rebecca rebeccalieb1@gmail.com 2-050 Walker, Lawrence J. lwalker@psych.ubc.ca 4-037, 4-037 Wang, Ming-Te halustayan@gmail.com 3-044 (57), 4-011, 4-023 (21) Waterhouse, Terry Terry.Waterhouse@ufv.ca 2-042 (42), 3-024 (30), 3-034 Walker, Susan skwalker@umn.edu 4-005 (84) Wang, Shujun 283434072@qq.com 2-005 (63), 4-058 (46) Waters, Patricia L. twaters@coloradocollege.edu 2-005 (20) Wallace, Lacey lno106@psu.edu 4-014 Wang, Yan ywang48@syr.edu 4-041 (38) Waters, Theo E. Theo.waters@gmail.com 2-019 Waller, Erika wallere@missouri.edu 4-063 Wang, Yijie yiwang@prc.utexas.edu 4-032 Watson, Kelly H. kelly.a.haker@vanderbilt.edu 2-004 Walls, Melissa L. mlwalls@d.umn.edu 2-015 Wängqvist, Maria maria.wangqvist@psy.gu.se 3-044 (80) Watson, Kelly kelly.h.watson@gmail.com 3-051 (62) Walls, N. Eugene Eugene.Walls@du.edu 4-015 Ward, Amanda award3@luc.edu 2-024 (18) Watson, Malcolm watson@brandeis.edu 2-042 (68), 3-024 (41), 3-044 (68), 4023 (34) Walsh, Adam awalsh3@gmu.edu 3-051 (40) Ward, L. Monique ward@umich.edu 2-061, 2-061, 2-069, 4-049 Walsh, Jennifer L. jennifer_walsh@brown.edu 3-032 Ward, Tanya tward@uvic.ca 4-058 (67) Walsh, Sophie sophiewalsh@gmail.com 2-046 Wargo Aikins, Julie julie.aikins@uconn.edu 4-058 (49) Walter, Theresa tw33@uw.edu 2-042 (40) Warren, Michael T. michael.warren@cgu.edu 2-042 (67) Watson, Ryan J. ryanwatson@ucla.edu 3-024 (82) Watt, Helen M. helen.watt@monash.edu 3-017 Way, Niobe Niobe.Way@nyu.edu 2-060 (30), 2-078, 3-016, 3-016, 3016, 3-024 (81), 3-025, 3-044 (22), 3069, 4-011 Web, Felecia R. frwebb@umich.edu 2-010 Walters, Jeanette M. marie071@vt.edu 3-006 (78), 3-024 (40) 182 Weber, Lidia lidiaw@uol.com.br 3-044 (5), 3-061 Wells, Corrie Corrie_Wells@csumb.edu 4-051 Weeks, Trisha trisha.weeks@psych.utah.edu 3-044 (75) Weems, Carl cweems@uno.edu 3-044 (73) Welsh, Deborah P. dwelsh@utk.edu 2-067, 3-006 (70), 3-024 (54), 3-051 (57), 3-059, 4-023 (56), 4-041 (45), 4-041 (65) Wegner, Lisa lwegner@uwc.ac.za 4-007 Wei, Xing starkill02@163.com 4-023 (43) Weichold, Karina karina.weichold@uni-jena.de 4-007 Weidenbenner, Jenna V. jvweidenbenner@gmail.com 2-045 Weigard, Alexander tub47574@temple.edu 3-063 Weigensberg, Elizabeth eweigensberg@chapinhall.org 3-018 Weiler, Lindsey Lindsey.Weiler@colostate.edu 3-044 (65) Weiner, Michelle B. michelle.weiner@tufts.edu 4-041 (76) Weins, Thomas K. twiens87@interchange.ubc.ca 4-037 Weinstock, Karrie Kweinstock@branksome.on.ca 3-024 (65) Weisbach, Dan dew912@gmail.com 2-042 (11) Weisner, Thomas S. tweisner@ucla.edu 3-045.5, 4-058 (30) Weiss, John K. weiss@neutral-zone.org 2-013 Welsh, Kayleigh L. kayleigh.welsh.71@my.csun.edu 4-005 (22) Welsh, Marilyn Marilyn.Welsh@unco.edu 2-042 (22), 3-051 (26) Welton, Sarah R. tripps@spu.edu 3-006 (32), 3-006 (33) Welty, Leah J. lwelty@northwestern.edu 2-060 (58) Wenner, Jennifer wenner@umn.edu 4-005 (77) Wentzel, Kathryn R. wentzel@umd.edu 2-005 (21) Wenzel, Amanda J. wenz0107@umn.edu 2-024 (59), 2-060 (10) West, Arthur amwest03@gmail.com 3-051 (12) Westenberg, Michiel westenberg@fsw.leidenuniv.nl 2-016 Westerhaus, Kendra westkend@isu.edu 2-024 (77), 3-024 (2) Westrich, Lisa westrich@stanford.edu 2-039 Weybright, Elizabeth ehw110@psu.edu 4-007 Wheeler, Jenna jwheele1@uoregon.edu 2-042 (12) Weisskirch, Robert S. rweisskirch@csumb.edu 3-002 183 Wheeler, Lorey A. lorey@asu.edu 2-005 (55) Whitbeck, Les B. lwhitbeck2@unl.edu 2-015 White, Caroline cmw6b@virginia.edu 3-024 (75), 4-005 (49), 4-041 (71) White, Catherine R. crwhite@casey.org 2-042 (62), 2-066 White, Elizabeth S. bethwhite@ucla.edu 3-044 (24), 4-058 (83) White, Rebecca M. rebecca.white@asu.edu 3-030 Whitehead, Jenna jennaw86@gmail.com 4-058 (3) Whitehouse, Wayne G. wwhiteho@temple.edu 4-047 Whiteman, Shawn sdwhitem@purdue.edu 3-024 (9), 3-051 (14), 4-005 (14), 4-057 Whitesell, Nancy R. nancy.whitesell@ucdenver.edu 2-015, 2-015 Whiteside-Mansell, Leanne WhitesideMansellLeanne@uams.edu 4-058 (7), 4-058 (17) Whitlock, Janis jlw43@cornell.edu 2-008, 4-015 Whitney, Jennifer jennifer.whitney@ppgwni.org 2-005 (83) Whittle, Sarah swhittle@unimelb.edu.au 2-012, 2-030, 3-006 (1) Wickrama, Kas wickrama@uga.edu 3-006 (62), 3-044 (59) Wieczorek, William wieczowf@buffalostate.edu 2-060 (32), 3-024 (32), 3-024 (33), 4-023 (51) Wiener, Judith judy.wiener@utoronto.ca 2-024 (31) Wigfield, Allan awigfiel@umd.edu 2-077 Wight, Danny danny@sphsu.mrc.ac.uk 2-054 Wightman, Patrick wightman@umich.edu 4-020 Wiium, Nora Nora.Wiium@psysp.uib.no 3-006 (31) Wilcox, Brian bwilcox1@unl.edu 2-017, 4-026 Wilhelm, Mark O. mowilhel@iupui.edu 4-005 (76) Williford, Anne awilliford@ku.edu 3-064 Wolf, Sharon sharon.wolf@nyu.edu 4-071 Willig, Amanda mandyrd@uab.edu 2-043 Wolfe, Misty wolfemisty@yahoo.com 2-072 Willoughby, Brian bwilloughby@partners.org. 2-052 Wolfson, Amy awolfson@holycross.edu 2-060 (38) Willoughby, Teena twilloughby@brocku.ca 3-024 (17), 3-044 (32), 4-058 (68) Wong, Jennifer D. jendwong@gmail.com 4-005 (48) Wilson, Anna jessfales@yahoo.com 4-023 (57) Wong, Jennifer jennscomet@hotmail.com 3-006 (74) Wilson, Carlene carlene.wilson@flinders.edu.au 4-034 Wong, Jessie J. jessie.wong@asu.edu 4-049.5, 4-058 (23) Wilson, Carlene wils0232@flinders.edu.au 4-034 Wong, Maria M. wongmari@isu.edu 2-024 (77), 3-024 (2) Wilson, Leah J. leahwilson@hotmail.com 4-005 (65) Wong, Serena serenawong.web@gmail.com 2-024 (71) Will, Geert-Jan g.j.will@fsw.leidenuniv.nl 2-060 (76) Windle, Michael mwindle@emory.edu 3-024 (60), 4-023 (33) Wille, Diane E. dwille@ius.edu 4-023 (54) Winges-Yanez, Nick L. nikgarnet@yahoo.com 3-051 (37) Williams, Amanda amanda.williams10@okstate.edu 4-041 (23), 4-058 (40) Winsler, Adam awinsler@gmu.edu 4-041 (40) Williams, Amber D. amberdw@umich.edu 2-010, 2-010 Winters, Ken C. KWinters@tresearch.org 4-041 (32) Williams, Amy J. ajw34@buffalo.edu 3-006 (73) Wintre, Maxine G. mwintre@yorku.ca 3-051 (15) Williams, Jessica jessmwilliams@yahoo.com 3-051 (82) Witherspoon, Dawn Paula dpw14@psu.edu 3-025.5, 4-045, 4-062 Williams, Lela R. lrw@asu.edu 2-005 (8), 3-059 Witkiewitz, Katie katie.witkiewitz@wsu.edu 4-005 (60), 4-066 Williamson, Ariel A. awilliamson@psych.udel.edu 2-024 (67) Witkow, Melissa mwitkow@willamette.edu 2-024 (23), 3-044 (9) 184 Wood, Becky beckyannwood@hotmail.com 4-058 (82) Wood, Dana dwood@gseis.ucla.edu 4-018, 4-018, 4-041 (19) Wood, Megan meganwood43@gmail.com 2-005 (52), 2-005 (72) Woodbury, Ryan rywood89@gmail.com 2-060 (78) Woodford, Jillian jillianwoodford@mail.umkc.edu 3-006 (52) Woods, Adrienne D. adriennedwoods@gmail.com 2-042 (19) Wormington, Stephanie stephanie.virgine.wormington@ gmail.com 2-005 (17), 2-005 (32) Wormuth, Bernadette M. bernadette.wormuth@hws.edu 3-006 (46) Wu, Wei wwei@ku.edu 2-005 (65) Yang, Wei weiyang@mail.med.upenn.edu 2-005 (40) Worrell, Frank C. frankc@berkeley.edu 2-005 (4), 2-024 (4), 2-042 (4), 3-051 (69) Wurster, Melissa E. melissawrstr89@gmail.com 2-024 (23), 3-044 (9) Yang, Xiao-Fei xiaofeiy@usc.edu 2-024 (72) Wurster, Tabitha J. tabitha.wurster@temple.edu 3-006 (44), 3-024 (52), 3-024 (56) Yates, Ashlee ashleekyates@gmail.com 3-060 Wymbs, Brian T. brian.wymbs@seattlechildrens.org 3-044 (39) Yates, Tuppett tuppett@ucr.edu 3-051 (66) Xia, Yan rxia2@unl.edu 4-041 (14) Yau, Jenny Y. jyyau@apu.edu 3-024 (7) Xia, Yan R. yxia@mail.unomaha.edu 3-024 (11) Yazedjian, Ani ay12@txstate.edu 2-005 (5), 3-006 (36) Xiao, Jing J. xiao@uri.edu 2-042 (39) Ybarra, Michele michele@is4k.com 2-035, 2-035, 2-035 Xie, Hongling hxie@temple.edu 2-042 (52), 3-006 (44), 3-024 (52) Yeager, David dyeager@gmail.com 4-062 Xie, Mixue mxie@ucdavis.edu 2-005 (53) Yen, Irene Irene.Yen@ucsf.edu 2-024 (2) Xing, Kuan kuanxing83@gmail.com 2-005 (75) Yeung Thompson, Rachel rsyeung@uvic.ca 2-071, 4-053, 4-053, 4-053 Xu, Yiyuan yiyuan@hawaii.edu 2-024 (52) Yi, Chit Yuen cyi@mix.wvu.edu 2-049, 4-005 (72) Yale, Elizabeth eyale15@gmail.com 3-051 (24) Yildirim, Filiz filizyildirim06@hotmail.com 4-058 (2) Yang, Chia-chen cyang33@wisc.edu 3-024 (84), 4-041 (54) Yip, Tiffany tyip@fordham.edu 4-043 Yang, Hai-Yun acapula@gmail.com 2-042 (79) Yoder, Nicholas nyoder@umich.edu 2-024 (75) Yang, Phoua phoua.yang@uwrf.edu 2-005 (10) Yohalem, Nicole nicole@forumfyi.org 2-063, 4-026 Wortel, Sanne N. sanne.wortel@gmail.com 3-006 (40) Wozniak, Agnieszka awozniak@uoguelph.ca 2-060 (7), 4-023 (7) Wray-Lake, Laura laura.wray-lake@cgu.edu 1-007, 2-024 (24), 2-042 (67), 2-042.5, 3-006 (24), 3-024 (26) Wright, Aidan G. aidan@psu.edu 3-006 (75) Wright, Ellen J. ejwright@brandeis.edu 4-023 (34) Wright, Michelle amwright@wayne.edu 2-033 Wright, Michelle mwrigh20@depaul.edu 2-024 (41), 2-060 (43), 3-031, 3-044 (50) Wright, Stephanie wrigsm8@wfu.edu 3-024 (8) Wu, Jamie Heng-Chieh wuhengch@msu.edu 2-013, 3-044 (26), 4-058 (70) Wu, Joanna wu76@illinois.edu 3-006 (9), 3-024 (18) Wu, Johnny johnnyjohnnywu@gmail.com 4-066 Wu, Max B. max.b.wu@gmail.com 4-067 Wu, Tai-Lung synchronicity1983@hotmail.com 2-024 (74) Yang, Shaogang ysg07@163.com 4-058 (10) 185 Yomtov, Dani dyomtov@hotmail.com 2-042 (11) Zalewski, Maureen Zalewski@u.washington.edu 2-028, 4-035 Zeman, Janice janice.zeman@umit.maine.edu 3-051 (70) Yoo, Hana yoo.161@buckeyemail.osu.edu 2-042 (54) Zaman, Widaad wzaman@emory.edu 2-019 Zettergren, Peter pzn@psychology.su.se 3-044 (46) Yoo, Hyung Chol (Brandon) yoo@asu.edu 4-023 (59) Zamboanga, Byron L. bzamboan@smith.edu 2-060 (54) Zevenbergen, Felice C. felice_cleo@hotmail.com 4-023 (83) Yoon, Jina jyoon@wayne.edu 2-005 (37) Zapata Roblyer, Martha martha.roblyer@okstate.edu 3-006 (27) Zhang, Bao zhanbao480@163.com 2-042 (48) Young, Cara C. cara.young@vanderbilt.edu 4-058 (62) Zarbatany, Lynne lynnez@uwo.ca 3-006 (53), 3-044 (53), 4-041 (77) Zhang, Jie-ting jenny121@126.com 2-005 (63), 4-041 (84) Young, Maria-Elena mariaelenayoung@yahoo.com 2-005 (2) Zaremba-Morgan, Ali zaremla@gmail.com 4-041 (33) Zhang, Lan zhanglan_8194@yahoo.cn 2-060 (62), 4-005 (63), 4-023 (63) Young, Richard A. Richard.Young@ubc.ca 2-060 (7), 4-005 (65) Zarrett, Nicole zarrettn@mailbox.sc.edu 3-006 (18), 4-023 (16) Zhang, Lu zhanglu9723@163.com 2-005 (62), 3-006 (58), 4-023 (63), 4058 (65) Youngblade, Lise M. Lise.Youngblade@colostate.edu 3-015, 3-015 Zavattini, Giulio C. giuliocesare.zavattini@uniroma1.it 2-005 (47), 3-024 (47) Yu, Chengfu cngzycf@126.com 2-005 (63), 4-041 (84), 4-058 (46) Zayat, Maya mmzayat@loyola.edu 3-051 (43) Yu, Rongqin r.yu@uu.nl 3-051 (74), 4-005 (75) Zebracki, Kathy kzebracki@shrinet.org 3-006 (14) Yuen, Cynthia cynthia.yuen@nih.gov 2-024 (57) Zehe, Jennifer M. jen.zehe@gmail.com 3-006 (73), 4-023 (51) Yücel, Murat murat@unimelb.edu.au 2-030, 3-006 (1) Zehr, Julia zehrj@mail.nih.gov 2-006 (G4), 3-042, 3-047, 3-057 Zaff, Jonathan jonz@americaspromise.org 2-039, 4-023 (64) Zeiders, Katharine H. Katharine.Zeiders@asu.edu 2-043, 3-030 Zaidman-Zait, Anat anat.zaidman@ubc.ca 4-023 (53) Zeisser, Cornelia czeisser@uvic.ca 3-044 (64) Zaitsoff, Shannon L. shannon_zaitsoff@sfu.ca 3-024 (45) Zelaya, Linda linda.zelaya.96@my.csun.edu 4-005 (22) Zakaryan, Arie ariezakaryan@gmail.com 2-042 (64) Zeldin, Shepherd rszeldin@wisc.edu 3-037 186 Zhang, Min-qiang zhangmq1117@yhaoo.com.cn 4-041 (84) Zhang, Wei zhangwei@scnu.edu.cn 2-005 (63), 2-042 (52), 4-023 (60), 4058 (46) Zhang, Wenxin zhangwenxin@sdnu.edu.cn 2-024 (3), 2-042 (3), 4-023 (43) Zhang, Xiaoyun xzhang@huskers.unl.edu 3-024 (11) Zhang, Ye zhang65@iupui.edu 4-005 (76) Zhao, Xu xuz930@mail.harvard.edu 2-060 (25) Zhen, Shuangju shuangjuzhen@gmail.com 2-042 (52), 4-058 (46) Zheng, Yao yzz122@psu.edu 3-044 (33) Zheng, Yuhong mimizhyh@yahoo.com.cn 2-005 (62), 2-060 (62), 3-006 (58), 4-041 (61), 4-058 (64), 4-058 (65) Zhou, Hui happy_zhui@sina.com 2-042 (48) Zhou, Qing qingzhou@calmail.berkeley.edu 2-042 (49) Zhu, Qing zhuqing2006418@126.com 3-006 (58), 4-023 (63), 4-058 (65) Zichinski, Kristen kzychins@depaul.edu 2-020 Zimmer-Gembeck, Melanie J. m.zimmer-gembeck@griffith.edu.au 2-044, 2-044, 4-070, 4-070 Zimmerman, Marc A. mrcz@umich.edu 2-005 (9), 2-062, 3-003, 4-005 (59) Zimmerman, Toni Toni.Zimmerman@colostate.edu 3-044 (65) Zook, Joan M. zook@geneseo.edu 2-060 (50) Zukauskiene, Rita rzukausk@mruni.eu 2-024 (50) Zurbriggen, Eileen L. zurbrigg@ucsc.edu 2-005 (23), 2-060 (84) Zvonkovic, Andie azvonkov@macalester.edu 2-060 (12) Zwaan, Michiel michielfz@gmail.com 4-069 187