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In Sync with Adolescence: The Role of Morningness-Eveningness in Development (Longitudinal Research in the Social and Behavioral Sciences: An Interdisciplinary Series)
 
 
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In Sync with Adolescence: The Role of Morningness-Eveningness in Development (Longitudinal Research in the Social and Behavioral Sciences: An Interdisciplinary Series) [Hardcover]

Anna-Karin Andershed (Author)

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Book Description

0387224173 978-0387224176 January 7, 2005 1

At the start of every school day, it’s not an unfamiliar sight to see younger children bounding toward school, bright-eyed and bushy-tailed, ready to seize the day. In contrast, adolescents sometimes seem to sleepwalk toward their middle and high schools, often bleary-eyed, cantankerous, and less than enthusiastic to get down to work. Why the difference?

Recent developmental research has demonstrated a relationship between sleep/wake patterns and different kinds of problem behaviors, including social adjustment problems, family coercion, and disaffection from school. Adolescents who prefer staying up later in the evening and arising late in the morning (i.e., eveningness) have often been considered at greater risk of suffering from such problem behaviors as delinquency and negative relationships with parents and teachers. Those who tend to go to bed and arise earlier (i.e., morningness) have long been associated with more positive outcomes. In the majority of previous research, however, these concepts have never been adequately tested.

In Sync with Adolescence: The Role of Morningness-Eveningness in Development examines the possible effects of adolescent preferences on problem behavior in different contexts. This volume presents a new way of looking at morningness-eveningness in relation to adolescent development in general and on problem behavior in particular. The study has produced results, the implications of which necessitate a reinterpretation of the current thinking about morningness-eveningness and adolescent adjustment.

This volume should be of particular interest to developmental psychologists and researchers who are interested in examining the role of biological factors in psychological processes as well as to sleep researchers who are interested in both the clinical and behavioral aspects. In addition, it is a valuable resource for clinical child and school psychologists, medical staff, teachers, and anyone who works with adolescents.


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From the Back Cover

At the start of every school day, it’s not an unfamiliar sight to see younger children bounding toward school, bright-eyed and bushy-tailed, ready to seize the day. In contrast, adolescents sometimes seem to sleepwalk toward their middle and high schools, often bleary-eyed, cantankerous, and less than enthusiastic to get down to work. Why the difference?

Recent developmental research has demonstrated a relationship between sleep/wake patterns and different kinds of problem behaviors, including social adjustment problems, family coercion, and disaffection from school. Adolescents who prefer staying up later in the evening and arising late in the morning (i.e., eveningness) have often been considered at greater risk of suffering from such problem behaviors as delinquency and negative relationships with parents and teachers. Those who tend to go to bed and arise earlier (i.e., morningness) have long been associated with more positive outcomes. In the majority of previous research, however, these concepts have never been adequately tested.

In Sync with Adolescence: The Role of Morningness-Eveningness in Development examines the possible effects of adolescent preferences on problem behavior in different contexts. This volume presents a new way of looking at morningness-eveningness in relation to adolescent development in general and on problem behavior in particular. The study has produced results, the implications of which necessitate a reinterpretation of the current thinking about morningness-eveningness and adolescent adjustment.

This volume should be of particular interest to developmental psychologists and researchers who are interested in examining the role of biological factors in psychological processes as well as to sleep researchers who are interested in both the clinical and behavioral aspects. In addition, it is a valuable resource for clinical child and school psychologists, medical staff, teachers, and anyone who works with adolescents.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
People have a tendency to organize their behavior into cycles of activity and rest (Moore, 1995), and are different from one another in the way they practice this organization. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
problem beh, normbreaking behavior, evening types, circadian type, disaffection from school, monotony avoidance, morning tiredness, type adolescents, evening behavior, actual arising, morning type, less positive relationships, temporal preferences, forthcoming analyses, concurrent analyses, arising times, prospective analyses, school adjustment, circadian system, type boys, teacher relations, circadian rhythmicity, general conflicts, high depression, perceived effort
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Spearman Correlations, Lennernäs Junberger, American Psychiatric Association, Adolescents Evening, Broken Line, Dep Eve, Van Dongen
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