Kristin M. Voegtline, Ph.D.

Affiliations: 
2010 Pennsylvania State University, State College, PA, United States 
Area:
Psychobiology Psychology, Developmental Psychology
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Cynthia Stifter grad student 2010 Penn State
 (Physiological bases of emotion regulation in young children living in low-income, rural communities.)
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Publications

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Fan JG, Kuehn M, Voegtline KM, et al. (2023) Increasing Maternal Anxiety in the Pre- to Postpartum Transition Predicts Infant Feeding Practices and Beliefs. Academic Pediatrics
DiPietro JA, Kivlighan KT, Voegtline KM, et al. (2021) It Takes Two: An antenatal to postnatal RDoC framework for investigating the origins of maternal attachment and mother-infant social communication. Development and Psychopathology. 33: 1539-1553
Riis JL, Granger DA, Woo H, et al. (2019) Long-Term Associations Between Prenatal Maternal Cortisol and Child Neuroendocrine-Immune Regulation. International Journal of Behavioral Medicine
Voegtline KM, Johnson SB, Huang RB, et al. (2019) The bloom is (slightly) off the rose: the motherhood effect on psychological functioning in successive pregnancies. Journal of Psychosomatic Obstetrics and Gynaecology. 1-6
Busuito A, Quigley KM, Moore GA, et al. (2019) In sync: Physiological correlates of behavioral synchrony in infants and mothers. Developmental Psychology
Dipietro JA, Voegtline KM, Pater HA, et al. (2018) Predicting child temperament and behavior from the fetus. Development and Psychopathology. 30: 855-870
Burrell TD, Voegtline KM, Mistry KB. (2018) An Association Between Maternal Intimate Partner Physical Violence and a Loaded Firearm in the Home. Journal of Interpersonal Violence. 886260518786503
Voegtline KM, Costigan KA, DiPietro JA. (2017) Maternal salivary testosterone in pregnancy and fetal neuromaturation. Developmental Psychobiology
Moore GA, Quigley KM, Voegtline KM, et al. (2015) Don't worry, be (moderately) happy: Mothers' anxiety and positivity during pregnancy independently predict lower mother-infant synchrony. Infant Behavior & Development. 42: 60-68
Blair C, Ursache A, Mills-Koonce R, et al. (2015) Emotional reactivity and parenting sensitivity interact to predict cortisol output in toddlers. Developmental Psychology. 51: 1271-7
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