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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2016 Jun 1.
Published in final edited form as: Dev Psychol. 2015 Mar 16;51(6):823–830. doi: 10.1037/dev0000012

Table 1.

Descriptive and demographic data for participants included in the adult ASA sample

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