Anne Bowker
Carleton University
17 Papers
155 Citations
Anne Bowker is an academic researcher from Carleton University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Shyness & Human physical appearance. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 17 publications.
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Papers
Keeping it all inside: Shyness, internalizing coping strategies and socio-emotional adjustment in middle childhood:
TL;DR: Despite growing research results indicating that shyness is a risk factor for psychosocial maladjustment in childhood, less is known about the conceptual mechanisms that may underlie these associat... as discussed by the authors.
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Treatments for autism: Parental choices and perceptions of change
TL;DR: Examining the types of treatments in current use by families of children with ASD found that most families adopt multiple treatment approaches, and parents were most likely to discontinue non-evidence based treatments when they did not see improvement in their child’s functioning.
142
Predicting Friendship Stability during Early Adolescence.
TL;DR: The authors examined the stability of early adolescent best friendships across a school year and found that approximately 50% of the reciprocated best friendships remained stable across the school year, whereas stability of girls' best friendships was negatively correlated with minimization strategies but positively related to greater use of negative strategies in response to peer conflict.
141
Parenting daily hassles, child temperament, and social adjustment in preschool
TL;DR: The authors explored the relation between child temperament, parenting daily hassles, and children's social adjustment in preschool and found that parent daily hasles predicted child externalizing problems beyond the contribution of child temperament characteristics.
105
Examining the Impostor Phenomenon in Relation to Self-Esteem Level and Self-Esteem Instability
Nick Schubert,Anne Bowker +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the impostor phenomenon was examined in relation to self-esteem level and self-reported self-doubts, and a measure of self-rated instability.
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