Table 1.
Sample (Representative Publication) | N | Gender (% Female) |
Age M, SD (Range) |
Ethnicity (% non-minority) |
Reliability (ICC Range) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Italian mothers of young children (sub-sample in Coppola et al., 2006) | 110 | 100 | 34, 4.93 (19–44) | 98 | .82–.94 |
US Midwestern mothers of young children (Groh et al., in press) | 108 | 100 | 34, 5.23 (22–46) | 64 | .83–.94 |
Portuguese mothers of young children (M. Veríssimo laboratory) | 89 | 100 | 34.9, 4.6 (22–50) | 100 | .84–.95 |
Portuguese fathers of young children (M. Veríssimo laboratory) | 70 | 0 | 36.8, 5.8 (28–63) | 100 | .86–.95 |
US Midwestern non-parent college students (Groh & Roisman, 2009) | 60 | 50 | 19, 1.03 (18–23) | 70 | .93–.99 |
US Northeastern non-parent emerging adults (H. S. Waters laboratory) | 60 | 60 | 21.8, 1.6 (20–30) | 53 | .79–.89 |
US Northeastern Mothers of infants (H .S. Waters laboratory) | 55 | 100 | 33, 4 (25–42) | 90 | .84–.93 |
US Southern Mothers of children in daycare (Vaughn et al., 2007) | 50 | 100 | 35.6, 4.4 (28–43) | 80 | .55–.93 |
US Northeastern Mothers of 9–12 year olds (Waters et al., under review) | 41 | 100 | 44.9, 3.8 (38–53) | 90 | .73–.85 |
US Northeastern Mothers of young children (H. S. Waters laboratory) | 40 | 100 | 35, 6.5 (27–46) | 78 | .85–.94 |
US Midwestern Mothers of preschoolers (Bost et al., 2006) | 31 | 100 | 32.8, 4.1 (22–43) | 65 | .65–.91 |