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  • Self- and Social-Regulation: Social Interaction and the Development of Social Understanding and Executive Functions

    Self- and Social-Regulation by Sokol, Bryan; Muller, Ulrich; Carpendale, Jeremy;

    Social Interaction and the Development of Social Understanding and Executive Functions

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 91.00
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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 4 February 2010

    • ISBN 9780195327694
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages472 pages
    • Size 157x236x38 mm
    • Weight 788 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 1 halftone, 19 line illus.
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    Short description:

    This volume is a valuable resource for student and professional researchers interested in executive function, emotion, and social development.

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    Long description:

    New research on children's executive functioning and self-regulation has begun to reveal important connections to their developing social understanding (or "theories of mind") and emotional competence. The exact nature of the relations between these aspects of children's social and emotional development is, however, far from being fully understood. Considerable disagreement has emerged, for instance, over the question of whether executive functioning facilitates social-emotional understanding, or vice versa. Recent studies linking the development of children's social understanding with aspects of their interpersonal relationships also raise concerns about the particular role that social interaction plays in the development of executive function. Three key questions currently drive this debate: Does social interaction play a role in the development of executive function or, more generally, self-regulation? If it does play a role, what forms of social interaction facilitate the development of executive function? Do different patterns of interpersonal experience differentially affect the development of self-regulation and social understanding? In this book, the contributors address these questions and explore other emerging theoretical and empirical links between self-regulation, social interaction, and children's psycho-social competence. It will be a valuable resource for student and professional researchers interested in executive function, emotion, and social development.

    This excellent book is unique in bringing together a very diverse group of authors who have something interesting to say about self-regulation or executive functioning and its relation to social understanding and social interaction. The authors vary in their perspectives, their approaches, and their foci, but together provide a stimulating, nuanced, and multifaceted review of theory and findings on self-regulation and executive functioning. Even an expert on the topic is likely to learn much about new approaches and empirical findings. This book will be very useful to researchers, students, and practitioners interested in the development of self-regulation and executive functioning. - Nancy Eisenberg, Regents' Professor, Department of Psychology, Arizona State University

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    Table of Contents:

    Preface
    SECTION 1
    Theoretical Perspectives on Self- and Social-Regulation
    Stuart I. Hammond, Maximilian B. Bibok, and Jeremy I. M. Carpendale
    Chapter 1
    Executive Function: Description and Explanation
    Anthony Steven Dick and Willis F. Overton
    Chapter 2
    Executive Function: Theoretical Concerns
    Jack Martin and Laura Failows
    Chapter 3
    Vygotsky, Luria, and the Social Brain
    Charles Fernyhough
    Chapter 4
    Epistemic Flow and the Social Making of Minds
    Charlie Lewis, Jeremy Carpendale, John Towse, and Katerina Maridaki-Kassotaki
    Chapter 5
    Developments and Regressions in Rule Use: The Case of Zenadine Zidane
    Jacob A. Burack, Natalie Russo, Tammy Dawkins, and Mariëtte Huizinga
    Chapter 6
    The Development of Self-Regulation: A Neuropsychological Perspective
    Marianne Hrabok and Kimberly A. Kerns
    Chapter 7
    Working Memory in Infancy and Early Childhood: What Develops?
    Maureen Hoskyn
    SECTION 2
    Social Understanding and Self-Regulation: From Perspective-Taking to Theory-of-Mind and Back
    Bryan W. Sokol, James Allen, Snjezana Huerta, and Ulrich Müller
    Chapter 8
    Object-Based Set-Shifting in Preschoolers: Relations to Theory of Mind
    Daniela Kloo, Josef Perner, and Thomas Giritzer
    Chapter 9
    Clarifying the Relation between Executive Function and Children's Theories of Mind
    Louis J. Moses and Deniz Tahiroglu
    Chapter 10
    The Developmental Relations between Perspective Taking and Prosocial Behaviors: A Meta-Analytic Examination of the Task-Specificity Hypothesis
    Gustavo Carlo, George P. Knight, Meredith McGinley, Rebecca Goodvin, and Scott C. Roesch
    Chapter 11
    The Development of Future Oriented Decision-Making
    Chris Moore
    SECTION 3
    Self-regulation in Social Contexts: Parents, Peers, and Individual Differences
    Arlene R. Young, Dagmar Bernstein, and Grace Iarocci
    Chapter 12
    A Bidirectional View of Executive Function and Social Interaction
    Suzanne Hala, Penny Pexman, Emma Climie, Kristin Rostad and Melanie Glenwright
    Chapter 13
    Underpinning Collaborative Learning
    Emma Flynn
    Chapter 14
    Psychological Distancing in the Development of Executive Function and Emotion Regulation
    Gerald F. Giesbrecht, Ulrich Müller, and Michael R. Miller
    Chapter 15
    Emotional Contributions to the Development of Executive Functions in the Family Context
    Susan M. Perez and Mary Gauvain
    Chapter 16
    Early Social and Cognitive Precursors and Parental Support For Self-Regulation and Executive Function: Relations from Early Childhood into Adolescence
    Susan H. Landry and Karen E. Smith
    Chapter 17
    Do Early Social Cognition and Executive Function Predict Individual Differences in Preschoolers' Prosocial and Antisocial Behavior?
    Claire Hughes and Rosie Ensor

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