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Psychology

D-Index
32
Citations
4727
World Ranking
10870
National Ranking
5683

Overview

Julie Poehlmann is affiliated with the University of Wisconsin-Madison in the United States. Their research primarily spans the fields of psychology and social sciences, with a significant focus on clinical psychology. They have contributed extensively to the study of child abuse and trauma, homelessness and social issues, criminal justice and corrections analysis, child and adolescent psychosocial and emotional development, migration, health and trauma, family and disability support research, and maternal mental health during pregnancy and postpartum.

Their recent publications include:

  • "A Developmental Perspective on Children With Incarcerated Parents" (2020) published in Child Development Perspectives
  • "COVID-19 and prison policies related to communication with family members." (2021) published in Psychology Public Policy and Law
  • "In-home video chat for young children and their incarcerated parents" (2020) published in Journal of Children and Media
  • "COVID-19 Inspired Relational Telemental Health Services for Incarcerated Individuals and Their Families" (2021) published in Contemporary Family Therapy
  • "Getting under the skin: Physiological stress and witnessing paternal arrest in young children with incarcerated fathers" (2021) published in Developmental Psychobiology

Their frequent co-authors include:

  • Luke Muentner
  • Sarah Jensen
  • Kaitlyn Pritzl
  • Pajarita Charles
  • Margaret Kerr

Julie Poehlmann often publishes in venues such as:

  • Journal of Child and Family Studies
  • Mindfulness
  • International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
  • Family Relations
  • Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience

The scholar's book publications include work with Rutgers University Press. One example is the 2023 publication "When Are You Coming Home?"

The subfields of study encompassing their work highlight concentrations in clinical psychology, sociology and political science, general health professions, safety research, and pediatrics, perinatology and child health.

Best Publications

  • Representations of Attachment Relationships in Children of Incarcerated Mothers

    Julie Poehlmann

  • Children’s Contact With Their Incarcerated Parents: Research Findings and Recommendations

    Julie Poehlmann;Danielle Dallaire;Ann Booker Loper;Leslie D. Shear

  • Attachment and caregiving relationships in families affected by parental incarceration.

    Rebecca J. Shlafer;Julie Poehlmann

  • Incarcerated mothers' contact with children, perceived family relationships, and depressive symptoms.

    Julie Poehlmann

  • Children's Family Environments and Intellectual Outcomes During Maternal Incarceration

    Julie Poehlmann

  • Family experiences associated with a child's diagnosis of fragile X or Down syndrome: evidence for disruption and resilience.

    Julie Poehlmann;Melissa Clements;Leonard J Abbeduto;Venous Farsad

  • The interaction of maternal and infant vulnerabilities on developing attachment relationships.

    Julie Poehlmann;Barbara H. Fiese

  • Predictors of depressive symptom trajectories in mothers of preterm or low birth weight infants.

    Julie Poehlmann;AJ Miller Schwichtenberg;Daniel Bolt;Janean Dilworth-Bart

  • Emerging self-regulation in toddlers born preterm or low birth weight: Differential susceptibility to parenting?

    Julie Poehlmann;A. J M Schwichtenberg;Rebecca J Shlafer;Emily Hahn

  • Maternal Resolution of Grief After Preterm Birth: Implications for Infant Attachment Security

    Prachi E. Shah;Melissa Clements;Julie Poehlmann

  • An attachment perspective on grandparents raising their very young grandchildren: Implications for intervention and research

    Julie Poehlmann

  • Parent-child interaction, maternal depressive symptoms and preterm infant cognitive function

    Beth M. McManus;Julie Poehlmann

  • The Paradox of Prematurity: The Behavioral Vulnerability of Late Preterm Infants and the Cognitive Susceptibility of Very Preterm Infants at 36 months Post-term

    Prachi E. Shah;Natashia Robbins;Renuka B. Coelho;Julie Poehlmann

  • Parent-infant interaction as a mediator of the relation between neonatal risk status and 12-month cognitive development

    Julie Poehlmann;Barbara H Fiese

  • Preterm infants who are prone to distress: differential effects of parenting on 36-month behavioral and cognitive outcomes.

    Julie Poehlmann;Amanda Hane;Cynthia Burnson;Sarah Maleck

  • Factors Associated With Young Children’s Opportunities for Maintaining Family Relationships During Maternal Incarceration*

    Julie Poehlmann;Rebecca J. Shlafer;Elizabeth Maes;Ashley Hanneman

  • Applied behaviour analysis: does intervention intensity relate to family stressors and maternal well‐being?

    A. Schwichtenberg;J. Poehlmann

  • Maternal depression and perceived social support as predictors of cognitive function trajectories during the first 3 years of life for preterm infants in Wisconsin

    Beth M. McManus;Julie Poehlmann

  • Children of Incarcerated Parents: A Handbook for Researchers and Practitioners

    J. Mark Eddy;Julie Poehlmann

  • Parenting Stress, Social Support, and Mother-Child Interactions in Families of Multiple and Singleton Preterm Toddlers

    Kristin F. Lutz;Cynthia Burnson;Amanda Hane;Anne Samuelson

Frequent Co-Authors

Barbara H. Fiese
Barbara H. Fiese University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
J. Mark Eddy
J. Mark Eddy New York University
Daniel M. Bolt
Daniel M. Bolt University of Wisconsin–Madison
James P. McHale
James P. McHale University of South Florida St. Petersburg
Leonard J Abbeduto
Leonard J Abbeduto University of California, Davis
Janice Zeman
Janice Zeman William & Mary
Jude Cassidy
Jude Cassidy University of Maryland, College Park
Thomas F. Anders
Thomas F. Anders Brown University
Gael I. Orsmond
Gael I. Orsmond Boston University
Phillip R. Shaver
Phillip R. Shaver University of California, Davis

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