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Library | Item Barcode | Call Number | Material Type | Item Category 1 | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Searching... | 30000010177942 | RJ134 C79 2000 | Open Access Book | Book | Searching... |
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Summary
Summary
Clinics in Developmental Medicine No. 152
Crying as a Sign, a Symptom and a Signal brings the reader up to date on new evidence concerning the developmental and clinical significance of infant crying in the first few months and years of life. Initially studied as a sign of disease, crying is now being understood not only as a sign, but also as a symptom of problematic functioning in early development. We now know much more about normative patterns of development of infant crying and how they may be manifest in a variety of clinical settings (emergency room complaint, painful procedures, colic, temper tantrums, non-verbal and mentally challenged infants). This has brought about a new conceptualization of the significance of early infant crying which an international team of experts describe and examine. In this authoritative clinical text, both historical and methodological perspectives are brought to a multidisciplinary synopsis of the new understanding of this infant behavior.
Author Notes
Ronald G. Barr, MDCM, FRCP-C Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Ronald G. Barr, MA, MDCM, FRCP-C, developed and tested prevention materials referred to as the Period of PURPLE Crying in collaboration with Marilyn Barr. He is the Canada Research Chair in Community Child Health Research at the University of British Columbia and Professor of Pediatrics in the Faculty of Medicine at UBC.
Table of Contents
1 Introduction: crying as a sign, a symptom and a signal: evolving concepts of crying behaviorRonald G. Barr and Brian Hopkins and James A. Green |
2 Can we hear the cause of infants' crying?Gwen E. Gustafson and Rebecca M. Wood and James A. Green |
3 Crying as an indicator of pain in infantsKenneth D. Craig and Cheryl A. Gilbert and Christine M. Lilley |
4 Colic - the 'transient responsivity' hypothesisRonald G. Barr and Megan Gunnar |
5 Clinical pies for etiology and outcome in infants presenting with early increased cryingLiisa Lehtonen and Siobhan Gormally and Ronald G. Barr |
6 Crying complaints in the emergency departmentSteven Poole and David Magilner |
7 Crying in the child with a disability: the special challenge of crying as a signalJames A. Blackman |
8 Toddlers' temper tantrums: flushing and other visible autonomic activity in an anger-crying complexMichael Potegal |
9 Acoustic cry analysis, neonatal status and long-term developmental outcomeJames A. Green and Julia R. Irwin and Gwen E. Gustafson |
11 Crying in infant primates: insights into the development of crying in chimpanzeesKim A. Bard |
12 Development of crying in normal infants: method, theory and some speculationsBrian Hopkins |
13 The crying infant and toddler: challenges and promissory notesRonald G. Barr and Brian Hopkins and James A. Green |
Index |