CHILD DEVELOPMENT & PARENTING CONSULTATIONS
  • Home
  • About Me
    • Background
    • Selected Presentations
    • Selected Publications
  • Parent Consultations
  • Workshops
  • FAQ
  • Contact Me
  • Child Development Topics
    • Infant-Parent Attachment
    • Temperament
    • Emotional Development in Young Children
    • Social Development and Peer Relationships in Young Children
  • Books
  • Parenting Resources
  • Advocacy/Policy
  • Home
  • About Me
    • Background
    • Selected Presentations
    • Selected Publications
  • Parent Consultations
  • Workshops
  • FAQ
  • Contact Me
  • Child Development Topics
    • Infant-Parent Attachment
    • Temperament
    • Emotional Development in Young Children
    • Social Development and Peer Relationships in Young Children
  • Books
  • Parenting Resources
  • Advocacy/Policy

Selected Publications

  • Abrams, K., Rifkin, A., & Hesse, E. (2006).  Examining the role of parental frightened/frightening subtypes in predicting disorganized attachment within a brief observation procedure. Development and Psychopathology, 18, 345-361.
  • Olkin, R., Abrams, K., Preston, P., & Kirshbaum, M. (2006).  Comparison of parents with and without disabilities raising teens: Information from the NHIS and two national surveys. Rehabilitation Psychology, Vol 51 (1), 43-49.
  • Heineman, T., Abrams, K., Dicker, S., Stone, J. (2005).  Spokes in the Wheel: The Multiple Relationships of Children in Foster Care.  Zero to Three  v25 n6 p27-33
  • Abrams, K., Yune, S., Kim, S., Jeon, H., Han, S., Hwang, J., et al. (2004). Trait and state aspects of harm avoidance and its implication for treatment in major depressive disorder, dysthymic disorder, and depressive personality disorder. Psychiatry Clinical Neurosciences, 58(3), 240-248.
  • Ha, K. S., Kim, S. J., Yune, S. K., Kim, J. H., Hwang, J. W., Lee, N. Y., et al. (2004). Three-year follow up of women with and without borderline personality disorder: Development of Cloninger's character in adolescence. Psychiatry Clinical Neurosciences, 58(1), 42-47.
  • Hesse, E., Main, M., Abrams, K. Y., & Rifkin, A. (2003).  Unresolved states regarding loss or abuse have “second generation” effects: Disorganized, role-inversion, and frightening ideation in the offspring of traumatized non-maltreating parents.  In M. Solomon & D. Siegel (Eds.),  Healing Trauma: Attachment, Mind, Body, & Brain.  New York: W.W. Norton.

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