His primary areas of study are Developmental psychology, Sibling, Social psychology, Juvenile delinquency and Twin study. The concepts of his Developmental psychology study are interwoven with issues in Nature versus nurture, LISREL, Longitudinal study and Personality development. His Sibling research includes themes of Birth order, Genetics, Intelligence quotient and Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.
His work deals with themes such as Secondary education and Adolescent development, which intersect with Social psychology. David C. Rowe works mostly in the field of Juvenile delinquency, limiting it down to concerns involving Impulsivity and, occasionally, Structural equation modeling. The Twin study study combines topics in areas such as Social psychology, Heredity, Father-child relations, Genetic variation and Social theory.
David C. Rowe mainly focuses on Developmental psychology, Social psychology, Nature versus nurture, Sibling and Juvenile delinquency. In his works, he performs multidisciplinary study on Developmental psychology and Social environment. In general Social psychology, his work in Social influence and Emotional contagion is often linked to Social class and Trait linking many areas of study.
His Nature versus nurture research is multidisciplinary, relying on both Personality development, Heredity, Behavioural genetics, Child development and Genetic determinism. His study in Intelligence quotient is interdisciplinary in nature, drawing from both National Longitudinal Surveys and Heritability. His Longitudinal study research is multidisciplinary, incorporating elements of Structural equation modeling and Verbal reasoning.
His primary areas of investigation include Developmental psychology, Adolescent health, Longitudinal study, Social psychology and Intelligence quotient. His research in the fields of Juvenile delinquency and Sibling overlaps with other disciplines such as Variance. His work in Sibling tackles topics such as Heritability which are related to areas like Genetic analysis, Affect, Mediation, Multivariate statistics and National Longitudinal Surveys.
David C. Rowe interconnects Structural equation modeling, Consilience, Stressor and Kinship in the investigation of issues within Social psychology. The study incorporates disciplines such as Birth order, Cross-sectional study, Demography, Age differences and Research methodology in addition to Intelligence quotient. His Behavioural genetics study combines topics from a wide range of disciplines, such as Friendship, Twin study, Peer group and Cohort study.
David C. Rowe spends much of his time researching Developmental psychology, Behavioural genetics, Genetic determinism, Demography and ROWE. His study ties his expertise on Longitudinal study together with the subject of Developmental psychology. The various areas that David C. Rowe examines in his Behavioural genetics study include Friendship, Peer group and Cohort study.
His Genetic determinism research incorporates elements of Genetic analysis, Affect, Mediation, National Longitudinal Surveys and Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. His studies examine the connections between Genetic analysis and genetics, as well as such issues in Heritability, with regards to Sibling, Kinship, Regression, Juvenile delinquency and Social psychology. His research investigates the connection between Demography and topics such as Sample size determination that intersect with problems in Genetic variation.
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The Limits of Family Influence: Genes, Experience, and Behavior.
David C. Rowe.
Contemporary Sociology (1995)
Temperament in early childhood
David C. Rowe;Robert Plomin.
Journal of Personality Assessment (1977)
Association and Linkage of the Dopamine Transporter Gene and Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder in Children: Heterogeneity owing to Diagnostic Subtype and Severity
I.D. Waldman;D.C. Rowe;A. Abramowitz;S.T. Kozel.
American Journal of Human Genetics (1998)
Advancing Knowledge about the Onset of Delinquency and Crime
David P. Farrington;Rolf Loeber;Delbert S. Elliott;J. David Hawkins.
Advances in clinical child psychology (1990)
Genetic and environmental influences on vocabulary IQ: Parental education level as moderator.
David C. Rowe;Kristen C. Jacobson;Edwin J. C. G. Van den Oord.
Child Development (1999)
The importance of nonshared (E-sub-1) environmental influences in behavioral development.
David C. Rowe;Robert Plomin.
Developmental Psychology (1981)
No More Than Skin Deep: Ethnic and Racial Similarity in Developmental Process
David C. Rowe;Alexander T. Vazsonyi;Daniel J. Flannery.
Psychological Review (1994)
Environmental and genetic influences on dimensions of perceived parenting: A twin study.
David C. Rowe.
Developmental Psychology (1981)
A biometrical analysis of perceptions of family environment: A study of twin and singleton sibling kinships.
David C. Rowe.
Child Development (1983)
HEREDITY AND SOCIOLOGICAL THEORIES OF DELINQUENCY: A RECONSIDERATION*
David C. Rowe;D. Wayne Osgood.
American Sociological Review (1984)
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