ABSTRACT Ss were 90 toddlers (15–48 mo old), survivors of the 1988 Armenia earthquake, who attend... more ABSTRACT Ss were 90 toddlers (15–48 mo old), survivors of the 1988 Armenia earthquake, who attended the Children's Psychotherapy Center for diagnostic evaluation and subsequent psychological treatment. This study of trauma memory in 90 toddlers who survived a devastating earthquake produced the following findings: 1. Most toddlers remembered what they personally experienced during the profound natural disaster, which had happened about 6 mo earlier. 2. An overwhelming number of the Ss were able to remember the disaster in nonverbal forms of memory, and this ability was not associated with age at the time of the quake. 3. The toddlers' verbal memories depended greatly on their age: Those who were 2.5 yrs old at the time of the quake were most likely to recall. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved)
ABSTRACT Ss were 90 toddlers (15–48 mo old), survivors of the 1988 Armenia earthquake, who attend... more ABSTRACT Ss were 90 toddlers (15–48 mo old), survivors of the 1988 Armenia earthquake, who attended the Children's Psychotherapy Center for diagnostic evaluation and subsequent psychological treatment. This study of trauma memory in 90 toddlers who survived a devastating earthquake produced the following findings: 1. Most toddlers remembered what they personally experienced during the profound natural disaster, which had happened about 6 mo earlier. 2. An overwhelming number of the Ss were able to remember the disaster in nonverbal forms of memory, and this ability was not associated with age at the time of the quake. 3. The toddlers' verbal memories depended greatly on their age: Those who were 2.5 yrs old at the time of the quake were most likely to recall. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved)
ABSTRACT Ss were 90 toddlers (15–48 mo old), survivors of the 1988 Armenia earthquake, who attend... more ABSTRACT Ss were 90 toddlers (15–48 mo old), survivors of the 1988 Armenia earthquake, who attended the Children's Psychotherapy Center for diagnostic evaluation and subsequent psychological treatment. This study of trauma memory in 90 toddlers who survived a devastating earthquake produced the following findings: 1. Most toddlers remembered what they personally experienced during the profound natural disaster, which had happened about 6 mo earlier. 2. An overwhelming number of the Ss were able to remember the disaster in nonverbal forms of memory, and this ability was not associated with age at the time of the quake. 3. The toddlers' verbal memories depended greatly on their age: Those who were 2.5 yrs old at the time of the quake were most likely to recall. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved)
ABSTRACT Ss were 90 toddlers (15–48 mo old), survivors of the 1988 Armenia earthquake, who attend... more ABSTRACT Ss were 90 toddlers (15–48 mo old), survivors of the 1988 Armenia earthquake, who attended the Children's Psychotherapy Center for diagnostic evaluation and subsequent psychological treatment. This study of trauma memory in 90 toddlers who survived a devastating earthquake produced the following findings: 1. Most toddlers remembered what they personally experienced during the profound natural disaster, which had happened about 6 mo earlier. 2. An overwhelming number of the Ss were able to remember the disaster in nonverbal forms of memory, and this ability was not associated with age at the time of the quake. 3. The toddlers' verbal memories depended greatly on their age: Those who were 2.5 yrs old at the time of the quake were most likely to recall. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved)
Uploads
Papers by Lewis Lipsitt