4 research outputs found

    Finding species-specific extracellular surface-facing proteomes in toxic dinoflagellates

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    202207 bckwVersion of RecordRGCPublishe

    Chronic methylmercury exposure induces production of prostaglandins : evidence from a population study and a rat dosing experiment

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    202105 bcvcAccepted ManuscriptRGCNational Natural Science Foundation of China, Ref. No: U1812403, National Natural Science Foundation of China, Ref. No: 41622208, Key Laboratory of Environmental Pollution Monitoring and Disease Control, Ref. No: GMU-2016-HJZ-01, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Ref. No: 4-ZZEGPublishe

    Confident Mothers, Easier Children: A Quasi-experimental Manipulation of Mothers’ Self-efficacy

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    This randomized micro-trial aims at testing the relationship between mothers’ self-efficacy and children’s behavior in a quasi-experimental design. It assesses if mothers’ self-efficacy can be improved using the social learning theory processes of social comparison and positive feedback on parenting experience. In this theory-based experiment, mothers’ self-efficacy was manipulated in a convenience sample of 42 mothers and their 4–5 year-old preschoolers. Mothers’ and children’s behaviors were assessed during a 45-min mother–child interaction session with free-play, frustration and problem-solving tasks. Both observational and self-report measures were used. Results show that mothers who received a positive feedback to reinforce their self-efficacy had more positive parenting behaviors with their children than non-reinforced mothers in the control group. Children whose mothers had been reinforced in their self-efficacy were more positive with their mothers. This quasi-experimental micro-trial contributes to discuss the quite complex causal nature of the relation between parents’ self-efficacy, parenting and child behavior. First, its results confirm that mothers’ self-efficacy could be improved using the social learning theory processes of social comparison and positive feedback. Second, this study documents the positive impact of a positive feedback to mothers, on both mothers and children, contributing in this way to parenting research and intervention design
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