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P.Davies CV July 2020

Journal of Family Psychology, 1995-2000 Associate Editor: Developmental Psychology, 2001-2005 Consulting Editor: Journal of Family Psychology, 2006-present Consulting Editor: Development and Psychopathology, 2007-present Consulting Editor: Child Development, 2008-present Consulting Editor: Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2009-present Consulting Editor: Family Process, 2010-present Consulting Editor: Developmental Psychology, 2011-present Consulting Editor: Journal of Marriage and Family, 2012-present Consulting Editor: Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 2013-present Consulting Editor: Family Relations, 2014-present Consulting Editor: Journal of Child and Family

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
101 views32 pages

P.Davies CV July 2020

Journal of Family Psychology, 1995-2000 Associate Editor: Developmental Psychology, 2001-2005 Consulting Editor: Journal of Family Psychology, 2006-present Consulting Editor: Development and Psychopathology, 2007-present Consulting Editor: Child Development, 2008-present Consulting Editor: Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2009-present Consulting Editor: Family Process, 2010-present Consulting Editor: Developmental Psychology, 2011-present Consulting Editor: Journal of Marriage and Family, 2012-present Consulting Editor: Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 2013-present Consulting Editor: Family Relations, 2014-present Consulting Editor: Journal of Child and Family

Uploaded by

Nane Agatao
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 1

CURRICULUM VITAE
Patrick Davies
July 2020

Address: Department of Clinical and Social Sciences in Psychology


University of Rochester
Rochester, NY 14627
(585) 273-4672
E-MAIL: [email protected]
FAX: (585) 273-1100

EDUCATION

B.A., Summa Cum Laude, Psychology, State University of New York (SUNY)
College at Brockport, 1990
M.A., Developmental Psychology, West Virginia University, 1993
Ph.D., Developmental Psychology, West Virginia University, 1995

PROFESSIONAL POSITIONS

2005-Present Professor, Department of Clinical and Social Sciences in Psychology,


University of Rochester
2001-2005 Associate Professor, Department of Clinical and Social Sciences in
Psychology, University of Rochester
1997-2001 Assistant Professor, Department of Clinical and Social Sciences in
Psychology, University of Rochester.
1995-1997 Assistant Research Scientist, Research Institute on Addictions, Buffalo,
NY (Post Doctoral Advisor: Michael Windle, Ph.D.).
1993-1995 Undergraduate Instructor, Department of Psychology, West Virginia
University. (Advisor: E. Mark Cummings, Ph.D.).
1990 Mental Health Counselor, Attention Deficit Disorder Program, Western
Psychiatric Institute and Clinic, University of Pittsburgh: Full-time
summer position.

SELECTED HONORS AND AWARDS (1990 - Present)

Departmental Scholar Award in Psychology, SUNY Brockport, 1990


Sigma Xi Student Research Award for Psychology, SUNY Brockport, 1990
Arlen and Louise Stone Swiger Fellow, West Virginia University, 1990-1993
Don Hake Outstanding Graduate Student Career Award, West Virginia University, 1995
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 2

University of Rochester Georgen Award for Distinguished Achievement and Artistry in


Undergraduate Education (2002)
Boyd McCandless Early Career Award for Significant Contributions to Developmental
Psychology, American Psychological Association, Division 7 (Developmental)
Award (2002)
Golden Key International Honour Society, Honorary Member for Commitment and
Outstanding Contributions to Higher Education, University of Rochester Chapter
(2006)
Reuben Hill Research and Theory Award (2007), National Council on Family Relations,
Best Research Paper.
Cattell, Sabbatical Award (2011-2012), James McKeen Cattell Fund Fellowships
Consulting Editor of the Year, Journal of Family Psychology (2015)
American Psychological Association Fellow (2018)
Expertscape World Expert (2019): Family Conflict (Top Researcher in the World)
Expertscape World Expert (2019): Family Relations and Parent-Child Relations
Mary Ainsworth Award for Excellence in Developmental Science, American
Psychological Association, Division 7 (Developmental) Award (2021)

AWARDED RESEARCH GRANT ACTIVITIES

1999-2005 Family process, emotional security, and child adjustment. National Institute of
Mental Health, R01 MH57318. Principal Investigator. Funded: $1,878,816. (co
PI: Mark Cummings)

2004-2010 Domestic violence, child security, and child mental health. National Institute of
Mental Health, R01 MH071256. Principal Investigator. Funded: $2,777,599. (Co-
PI: Dante Cicchetti)

2006-2012 Family process, emotional security, and child adjustment. National Institute of
Mental Health, 2R01 MH 57318. Principal Investigator. Funded: $3,164,171.
(Co-PIs: Mark Cummings, Dante Cicchetti).

2012-2014 An ethological analysis of children’s profiles of security in peer contexts.


National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, R21
HD068326. Principal Investigator. Funded: $436,597. (MPIs: Dante Cicchetti,
Melissa Sturge- Apple)

2010-2016 An ethological analysis of children's emotional security, National Institute of


Child Health and Human Development, R01 HD065425. Principal Investigator.
Funded: $3,109,653 (MPI: Melissa Sturge-Apple).

2010-2016 Emotional processes in families: New methods capturing multiple levels of


Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 3

analysis. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, R01


HD060789. Principal Investigator. Funded: $3,352,922. (MPIs: Melissa Sturge-
Apple, Wendi Heinzelman, Zeljko, Ignjatovic, Spencer Rosero, Mark Bocko).

2016-2021 Interparental conflict and parenting. National Institute of Child Health and
Human Development, R01 HD087761. Principal Investigator. Funded:
$2,960,899. (MPI: Melissa Sturge-Apple).

2018-2023 Constructive interparental conflict resolution and child adjustment. National


Institute of Child Health and Human Development, R01 HD094829. Principal
Investigator. Funded: $2,921,624. (co-I: Mona El-Sheikh)

TRAINING GRANT AND FELLOWSHIP AWARDS (Role: Sponsor/Mentor)

2002-2005 Title: Interparental conflict and parenting: The role of gender.


Trainee: Melissa Sturge-Apple, PhD
Funding Agency: National Institute of Mental Health
Mechanism: Post-Doctoral National Research Service Award (F32 MH 066596)
Funded: $121,124.
Role: Sponsor/Mentor

2003-2005 Title: Processes of child risk in family and community contexts.


Trainee: Marcia Winter
Funding Agency: National Institute of Mental Health
Mechanism: Pre-Doctoral National Research Service Award (F31 MH068057)
Funded: $72,464.
Role: Sponsor/Mentor

2009-2012 Title: Marital conflict, the role of sibling relationships, and child adjustment
Trainee: Sonnette Bascoe
Funding Agency: National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
Mechanism: Pre-Doctoral National Research Service Award (F31HD061348)
Funded: $89,564.
Role: Sponsor/Mentor

2010-2012 Title: Social behavior in the context of the peer group: The social defense system
and children’s reactivity to peer threat
Trainee: Meredith Martin.
Funding Agency: International Society for Human Ethology
Mechanism: Owen F. Aldis Scholarship
Funded: $11,000.
Role: Sponsor/Mentor
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 4

2010 – 2013 Title/Topic: Childhood temperament and developmental psychopathology


Trainee: Rochelle Hentges
Funding Agency: University of Rochester
Mechanism: Robert L. & Mary L. Sproull Graduate Fellowship
Funded: $44,000
Role: Sponsor/Mentor

2013 – 2015 Title/Topic: Developmental implictations of family instability and boundaries


Trainee: Jesse Coe
Funding Agency: University of Rochester
Mechanism: Robert L. & Mary L. Sproull Graduate Fellowship
Funded: $44,000
Role: Sponsor/Mentor

2016-2018 Title: The interplay of parenting and temperament in associations with child
executive functions
Trainee: Jennifer Suor
Funding Agency: National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
Mechanism: Pre-doctoral National Research Service Award (F31 HD 086941)
Funded: $87,152
Role: Co-sponsor/Co-mentor (Mentor: Melissa Sturge-Apple)

2017 – 2019 Title/Topic: Interparental conflict and children’s coping and adjustment
Trainee: Morgan Thompson
Funding Agency: University of Rochester
Mechanism: Robert L. & Mary L. Sproull Graduate Fellowship
Funded: $44,000
Role: Sponsor/Mentor

2018 Title: Interparental conflict and adolescent adjustment: The mediating role of
psychological control and basic need satisfaction.
Trainee: Aylin Koçak (Hacettepe University).
Funding Agency: Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey
Role: Sponsor/Mentor

2019 Title: What is going on in this family? A within-family perspective on the


emotional security theory.
Trainee: Wilhelmina (Willemijn) van Eldik (Erasmus University Rotterdam).
Funding Agency: Fulbright Visiting (Predoctoral) Scholar
Role: Sponsor/Mentor

PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS
American Psychological Association, 1989-present
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 5

American Psychological Association, Division 7 (Developmental Psychology) 1999-


present
Society for Research in Child Development, 1991-present

EDITORIAL AND REVIEWING ACTIVITIES

Associate Editor
Development and Psychopathology (2003 - Present)
Developmental Psychology (2008-2010)

Guest Editor
Development and Psychopathology, for special issue entitled “Family Systems and
Developmental Psychopathology” (2004)

Editorial Board Membership


Child Development (1998 - 2007)
Development and Psychopathology (1999 - Present)
Developmental Psychology, Principal Reviewer (2011-2016)
Developmental Psychology, Editorial Board Member (2017- )
Family Process (2015 – Present)
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology (2002- Present)
Journal of Family Psychology (2001 – 2003; 2007; 2012-present)
Partner Abuse (2008-present)
Society for Research in Child Development Conference, Review Panel Member (2001,
2003, 2009, 2013, 2019)
Society for Research on Adolescence Conference, Review Panel Member (2014)

Ad Hoc Reviewing

Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research


American Journal of Orthopsychiatry
Anxiety, Stress, & Coping
Appetite
Applied Developmental Science
Child and Youth Services
Child Development
Child Development Perspectives
Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry
Clinical Psychology Review
Couple and Family Research: Research and Practice
Development and Psychopathology
Developmental Psychology
Developmental Review
Family Relations
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 6

Family Process
Infant and Child Development
Infant Mental Health Journal
International Journal of Behavioral Development
International Journal of Forensic Mental Health
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Journal of Abnormal Psychology
Journal of Adolescence
Journal of Adolescent Research
Journal of Affective Disorders
Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology
Journal of Child and Family Studies
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry
Journal of Clinical Psychology
Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology
Journal of Family Psychology
Journal of Family Issues
Journal of Family Studies
Journal of Family Theory and Review
Journal of Family Violence
Journal of Marriage and the Family
Journal of Research on Adolescence
Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology
Journal of Special Education and Rehabilitation
Journal of Undergraduate Research
Merrill-Palmer Quarterly
Mind, Brain, and Education
Parenting: Science and Practice
Partner Abuse
Perceptual and Motor Skills
Physiology and Behavior
Psychophysiology
Psychological Assessment
Psychological Medicine
Psychological Bulletin
Psychological Reports
Psychological Science
Psychology of Violence
Psychoneuroendocrinology
Psychopharmacology
Social Development
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 7

Grant Reviewing Activities

Australian Research Council, Large Grant Support Reviewer (95-96)


Integrated Review Group (ZRG1-RPHB) (2004-2006, 2008) National Institute of Health:
Member of Social Psychology, Risk, and Psychosocial Development Review Group
(ZRG1-F11) (2005-2006; 2008). National Institute of Health:
Jacobs Foundation, Zurich Switzerland, Grant Reviewer (2011)
Standing Member, National Institute of Health: Member of the Psychosocial Development, Risk,
and Prevention (PDRP) Study Section (2010-2013), National Institute of Health:
Chair, National Institute of Health: Member of the Psychosocial Development, Risk, and
Prevention (PDRP) Study Section (2011-2013), National Institute of Health.
Reviewer, United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation (2014)
Reviewer, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development,
T32 Training Grants (ZHD1 DSR-R 90) (2019)

Other Professional Committees

National Family Violence Legislative Resource Center, Advisory Board (2008-2014)


Early Career (Boyd McCandless) Award Committee Member, American Psychological
Association, Division 7 (2014)
Editor Search Committee Member, Journal of Family Psychology, American Psychological
Association (2019-2020)

PUBLICATIONS (*denotes student or postdoctoral student)

1. Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (1992). Parental depression, family functioning, and child
development: Risk factors, processes, and pathways. In D. Cicchetti & S. L. Toth (Eds.),
Rochester symposium on developmental psychopathology: Vol.4. A developmental
approach to affective disorders (pp. 283-322). Rochester, NY: University of Rochester
Press.

2. Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (1994). Maternal depression and child development.
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 35, 73-112. [Special Issue: Annual
Research Review]

3. Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (1994). Children and marital conflict: The impact of family
dispute and resolution. New York: Guilford Press. (2nd Printing).

4. Cummings, E. M., Davies, P. T., & Simpson, K. S. (1994). Marital conflict, gender, and
children's appraisals and coping efficacy as mediators of child adjustment. Journal of
Family Psychology, 8, 141-149. [Special Issue: “Understanding the Association Between
Marital Conflict and Child Adjustment”]
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 8

5. Davies, P. T., & Cummings, E. M. (1994). Marital conflict and child adjustment: An
emotional security hypothesis. Psychological Bulletin, 116, 387-411.

6. Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. (1995). The impact of parents on their children: An emotional
security hypothesis. Annals of Child Development, 10, 167-208.

7. Davies, P. T., & Cummings, E. M. (1995). Children's emotions as organizers of their reactions
to interadult anger: A functionalist perspective. Developmental Psychology, 31, 677-684.

8. Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. (1996). Emotional security as a regulatory process in normal
development and the development of psychopathology. Development and
Psychopathology, 8, 123-139. [Special Issue: “Regulatory Process”]

9. Davies, P. T., *Myers, R. L., & Cummings, E. M. (1996). Responses of children and
adolescents to marital conflict scenarios as a function of the emotionality of conflict
endings. Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 42, 1-21.

10. Davies, P. T., & Windle, M. (1997). Gender-specific pathways between maternal depressive
symptoms, family discord, and adolescent adjustment. Developmental Psychology, 33,
657-668.

11. Davies, P. T., & Cummings, E. M. (1998). Exploring children's emotional security as a
mediator of the link between marital relations and child adjustment. Child Development,
69, 124-139.

12. Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (1999). Depressed parents and family functioning:
Interpersonal effects and children's functioning and development. In T. Joiner & J.C.
Coyne (Eds.), Advances in interpersonal approaches: The interactional nature of
depression (pp. 299-327). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.

13. Davies, P. T., Dumenci, L., & Windle, M. (1999). The interplay between maternal depressive
symptoms and marital distress in the prediction of adolescent adjustment problems.
Journal of Marriage and the Family, 61, 238-254.

14. Windle, M., & Davies, P. T. (1999). Developmental theory and research. In K.E. Leonard &
H.T. Blane (Eds.), Psychological theories of drinking and alcoholism (2nd ed., pp. 164-
202). New York: Guilford Press.

15. Davies, P. T., *Myers, R. L., Cummings, E. M., & *Heindel, S. (1999). Adult conflict history
and children's responses to conflict: An experimental test. Journal of Family Psychology,
13, 610-628.
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 9

16. Windle, M., & Davies, P. T. (1999). Depression and heavy alcohol use among adolescents:
Concurrent and prospective relations. Development and Psychopathology, 11, 823-844.
[Special Issue: “Developmental Approaches to Substance Use and Abuse”]

17. Davies, P. T., & Windle, M. (2000). Middle adolescent dating pathways and psychosocial
adjustment. Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 46, 90-118.

18. Cummings, E. M., Davies, P. T., & Campbell, S. B. (2000). Developmental psychopathology
and family process: Theory, research, and clinical implications. New York: Guilford
Press. (Authored book) (2nd printing).

19. Davies, P. T. (2000). Parental conflict. In L. Balter (Ed.), Parenthood in America: An


Encyclopedia. Denver, CO: ABC-CLIO.

20. Davies, P. T., & *Lindsay, L. (2001). Does gender moderate the effects of conflict on
children? In J. Grych & F. Fincham (Eds.), Child Development and Interparental
Conflict (pp. 64-97). New York: Cambridge University Press.

21. Davies, P. T., & Windle, M. (2001). Interparental discord and adolescent adjustment
trajectories: The potentiating and protective role of intrapersonal attributes. Child
Development, 72, 1163-1178.

22. Cummings, E. M., Davies, P. T., & Campbell, S. B. (2001). Family process and children’s
adjustment: A developmental psychopathology approach. Brown University Child and
Adolescent Behavior Letter, 17, 6-7.

23. Davies, P. T. (2001). Teen dating and romantic relationships. In R. Lerner & J. Lerner (Eds.),
Adolescence in America. Denver, CO: ABC-CLIO.

24. Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (2002). Effects of marital discord on children: Recent
advances and emerging themes in process-oriented research. Journal of Child Psychology
and Psychiatry, 43, 31-63. [Special Issue: Annual Research Review]

25. Davies, P. T., *Forman, E. M., *Rasi, J. A., & *Stevens, K. I. (2002). Assessing children’s
emotional security in the interparental subsystem: The Security in the Interparental
Subsystem (SIS) Scales. Child Development, 73, 544-562.

26. Davies, P. T. (2002). Conceptual links between Byng-Hall’s Theory of Parentification and
the Emotional Security Hypothesis. Family Process, 41, 551-555.

27. Davies, P. T., & *Forman, E. M. (2002). Children’s patterns of preserving emotional security
in the interparental subsystem. Child Development, 73, 1880-1903.
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 10

28. Davies, P. T., Harold, G. T., *Goeke-Morey, M., Cummings, E. M. (2002). Children’s
emotional security and interparental conflict. Monographs of the Society for Research in
Child Development, 67, 1-129.

29. Campbell, S. B., Davies, P. T., & Cummings, E. M. (2003). A reply to Rutter’s Critical
Notice on Developmental Psychopathology and Family Process. Journal of Child
Psychology and Psychiatry, 44, 152-153.

30. Davies, P. T., Cummings, E. M., & Campbell, S. B. (2003). Developmental


psychopathology. In J. J. Ponzetti (Ed.), International Encyclopedia of Marriage and
Family Relationships (2nd ed., pp. 438-444). New York: Macmillan.

31. *Forman, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (2003). Family instability and adolescent maladjustment:
The mediating effects of parenting quality and adolescent appraisals of family security.
Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, 32, 94-105.

32. Davies, P. T., & *Lindsay, L. L. (2004). Interparental conflict and adolescent adjustment:
Why does gender moderate early adolescent vulnerability? Journal of Family
Psychology, 18, 170-180.

33. Davies, P. T., & Cicchetti, D. (Eds.). (2004). Special Issue: Family systems and
developmental psychopathology [Special Issue]. Development and Psychopathology, 16
(3).

34. Davies, P. T., Cummings, E. M., & Winter, M. A. (2004). Pathways between profiles of
family functioning, child security in the interparental subsystem, and child psychological
problems. Development and Psychopathology, 16, 525-550. [Special Issue: “Toward an
Integration of Family Systems and Developmental Psychopathology Approaches”]

35. Davies, P. T., *Sturge-Apple, M. L., & Cummings, E. M. (2004). Interdependencies among
interparental discord and parenting styles: The role of adult attributes and relationship
characteristics. Development and Psychopathology, 16, 773-797. [Special Issue: “Toward
an Integration of Family Systems and Developmental Psychopathology Approaches”]

36. Davies, P. T., & Cicchetti, D. (2004). Editorial: Toward an integration of family systems and
developmental psychopathology approaches. Development and Psychopathology, 16,
477-481.

37. *Sturge-Apple, M. L., Davies, P. T., Boker, S. M., & Cummings, E. M. (2004). Interparental
discord and parenting: Testing the moderating role of parent and child gender. Parenting:
Science and Practice, 4, 365-384.
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 11

38. Cummings, E. M., *Keller, P. S., & Davies, P. T. (2005). Towards a family process model of
maternMaral and paternal depression: Exploring multiple relations with child and family
functioning. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 46, 479-489.

39. *Forman, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (2005). Assessing children’s appraisals of security in the
family system: The development of the Security in the Family System (SIFS) scales.
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 46, 900-916.

40. *Schermerhorn, A. C., Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (2005). Children’s perceived
agency in the context of marital conflict: Relations with marital conflict over time.
Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 51, 121-144.

41. Davies, P. T. (2005). Capitalizing on the natural curiosity to explore and understand the
world. In How I Teach: Essays on teaching by winners of the Robert and Pamela
Georgen Award for Distinguished Achievement and Artistry in Undergraduate Teaching.
(Vol. 3, pp. 5-12). Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press.

42. *Shamir, H., Cummings, E. M., Davies, P. T., & *Goeke-Morey, M. C. (2005). Children’s
reactions to marital conflict resolution in Israel and in the United States. Parenting:
Science and Practice, 5, 371-386.

43. Davies, P. T., & Cummings, E. M. (2006). Interparental discord, family process, and
developmental psychopathology. In D. Cicchetti & D. J. Cohen (Eds.), Developmental
Psychopathology: Vol. 3: Risk, Disorder, and Adaptation (2nd ed., pp. 86-128). New
York: Wiley & Sons.

44. Davies, P. T., *Sturge-Apple, M. L., *Winter, M. A., Cummings, E. M., & *Farrell, D.
(2006). Child adaptational development in contexts of interparental conflict over time.
Child Development, 77, 218-233.

45. Cummings, E. M., *Schermerhorn, A. C., Davies, P. T., *Goeke-Morey, M. C., &
Cummings, J. S.. (2006). Interparental discord and child adjustment: Prospective
investigations of emotional security as an explanatory mechanism. Child Development,
77, 132-152.

46. *Sturge-Apple, M. L., Davies, P. T., & Cummings, E. M. (2006). Hostility and withdrawal in
marital conflict: Effects on parental emotional unavailability and inconsistent discipline.
Journal of Family Psychology, 20, 227-238.

47. *Sturge-Apple, M. L., Davies, P.T., & Cummings, E. M. (2006). Impact of hostility and
withdrawal in interparental conflict on parental emotional unavailability and children's
adjustment difficulties. Child Development, 77, 1623-1641.
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 12

48. *Winter, M. A., Davies, P. T., Hightower, D., & *Meyer, S. (2006). Relations among family
adversity, caregiver communication, and children’s family representations. Journal of
Family Psychology, 20, 348-351.

49. Davies, P. T., *Winter, M. A., & Cicchetti, D. (2006). The implications of emotional security
theory for understanding and treating childhood psychopathology. Development and
Psychopathology, 18, 707-735.

50. Davies, P. T., & *Sturge-Apple, M. L. (2006). The impact of domestic violence on children’s
development. In T. L. Nicholls & J. Hamel (Eds.), Family interventions in domestic
violence: A handbook of gender-inclusive theory and treatment (pp. 165-189). New
York: Springer.

51. *Gomulak-Cavicchio, B., Davies, P. T., & Cummings, E. M. (2006). The role of maternal
communication patterns about conflict in associations between interparental conflict and
child psychosocial adjustment. Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 34, 757-771.

52. *Keller, P.S., Cummings, E. M., Davies, P. T., & Lubke, G. (2007). Children’s behavioral
reactions to marital conflict as a function of parents’ conflict behaviors and alcohol
problems. European Journal of Developmental Psychology, 4, 157-177.

53. Davies, P. T., *Sturge-Apple, M. L., Cicchetti, D., & Cummings, E. M. (2007). The role of
child adrenocortical functioning in pathways between forms of interparental conflict and
child maladjustment. Developmental Psychology, 43, 918-930.

54. Schermerhorn, A. C., Cummings, E. M., DeCarlo, C. A., & Davies, P. T. (2007). Children’s
influence in the marital relationship. Journal of Family Psychology, 21, 259-269.

55. Davies, P. T., & Sturge-Apple, M. L. (2007). Advances in the formulation of emotional
security theory: An ethologically-based perspective. Advances in Child Behavior and
Development, 35, 87-137.

56. *Keller, P. S., Cummings, E. M., Davies, P. T., & *Mitchell, P. M. (2008). Longitudinal
relations between parental drinking problems, family functioning, and child adjustment.
Development and Psychopathology, 20, 195-212.

57. *Schermerhorn, A. C., Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (2008). Children’s representations
of multiple family relationships: Organizational structure and development in early
childhood. Journal of Family Psychology, 22, 89-101.

58. Cummings, E. M., *Schermerhorn, A. C., *Keller, P. S., & Davies, P. T. (2008). Parental
depressive symptoms, children’s representations of family relationships, and child
adjustment. Social Development, 17, 278 -305.
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 13

59. Davies, P. T., & *Woitach, M. J. (2008). Children’s emotional security in the interparental
relationship. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 17, 269-274.
[REPRINTED in K. Dodge (Ed.), Current Directions in Child Psychopathology (2010).
New York: Pearson.]
60. Davies, P. T., *Woitach, M. J., *Winter, M. A., & Cummings, E. M. (2008). Children’s
insecure representations of the interparental relationship and their school adjustment: The
mediating role of attention difficulties. Child Development, 79, 1570-1582.

61. *Sturge-Apple, M. L., Davies, P. T., *Winter, M. A., & Cummings, E. M., *Schermerhorn,
A. C. (2008). Interparental conflict and children’s school adjustment: The mediational
role of emotional security in direct and indirect pathways. Developmental Psychology,
44, 1678-1690.

62. Davies, P. T., *Sturge-Apple, M. L., Cicchetti, D., & Cummings, E. M. (2008).
Adrenocortical underpinnings of children’s psychological reactivity to interparental
conflict. Child Development, 79, 1693-1706.

63. *McCoy, K., Cummings E. M., & Davies, P. T. (2009). Constructive and destructive marital
conflict, emotional security, and children’s prosocial behavior. Journal of Child
Psychology and Psychiatry, 50, 270-279.

64. *Sturge-Apple, M. L., Davies, P. T., Cicchetti, D., & Cummings, E. M. (2009). The role of
mothers’ and fathers’ adrenocortical reactivity in spillover between interparental conflict
and parenting practices. Journal of Family Psychology, 23, 215-225.

65. *Keller, P. S., Cummings, E. M., *Peterson, K. M., & Davies, P. T. (2009). A longitudinal
study of marital conflict in the context of depressive symptoms: Implications for
children’s adjustment problems. Social Development, 18, 536-555.

66. Davies, P. T., *Sturge-Apple, M. L., Cicchetti, D., *Manning, L. G., & Zale, E. (2009).
Children’s patterns of emotional reactivity to conflict as explanatory mechanisms in links
between interpartner aggression and child physiological functioning. Journal of Child
Psychology and Psychiatry, 50, 1384-1391.

67. *Bascoe, S. M., Davies, P. T., Sturge-Apple, M. L., & Cummings, E. M. (2009). Children’s
insecure representations of the interparental relationship and their psychological
maladjustment: Children’s peer information processing as an explanatory mechanism.
Developmental Psychology, 45, 1740-1751.

68. Davies, P. T., *Sturge-Apple M., *Woitach, M. J., & Cummings, E. M. (2009). A process
analysis of the transmission of distress from interparental conflict to parenting: Adult
relationship security as an explanatory mechanism. Developmental Psychology, 45, 1761-
1773.
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 14

69. *Schacht, P. M., Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P.T. (2009). Fathering in family context and
child adjustment: A longitudinal analysis. Journal of Family Psychology, 23, 790-797.

70. Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (2010). Marital conflict and children: An emotional
security perspective. New York: Guilford.

71. Sturge-Apple, M. L., Davies, P. T., Cicchetti, D., & *Manning, L. G. (2010). Mother’s
parenting practices as explanatory mechanisms in associations between interparental
violence and child adjustment. Partner Abuse, 1, 45-60.

72. *George, M. R. W., Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (2010). Positive aspects of fathering
and mothering and children’s attachment in kindergarten. Early Child Development and
Care, 180, 107-119.

73. *Winter, M. A., Davies, P. T., & Cummings, E. M. (2010). Children’s security in the context
of family instability and maternal communications. Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 56, 131-
142.
74. Sturge-Apple, M. L., Davies, P. T., & Cummings, E. M. (2010). Typologies of family
functioning and children’s adjustment during the early school years. Child Development,
81, 1320-1335.

75. *Kouros, C. D., Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. T., (2010). Early trajectories of interparental
conflict and externalizing problems as predictors of social competence in preadolescence.
Development and Psychopathology, 22, 527-538..

76. *George, M.R.W., *Koss, K.J., *McCoy, K.P., Cummings, E.M., & Davies, P.T. (2010).
Examining the family context and relations with attitudes toward school and scholastic
competence. Advances in School Mental Health Promotion, 3, 51-62.

77. *George, M. R. W., Cummings, E. M. & Davies, P. T. (2010). Positive aspects of fathering
and mothering, and children’s attachment in kindergarten. In L.A. Newland, H.S.
Freeman, & D.D. Coyl (Eds.), Emerging Topics on Father Attachment: Considerations
in Theory, Context and Development. London: Routledge.

78. *Koss, K. J., *George, M.R.W., *Bergman, K. N., Cummings, E. M., Davies, P.T., &
Cicchetti, D. (2011). Understanding children’s emotional processes and behavioral
strategies in the context of marital conflict. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology,
109, 336-352.

79. Davies, P.T., Sturge-Apple, M. L., & Cicchetti, D. (2011). Interparental aggression and
children’s adrenocortical reactivity: Testing an evolutionary model of allostatic load.
Development and Psychopathology, 23, 801-814. [Special Issue: “Allostatic Load”]
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 15

80. *Keller, P.S., *Gilbert, L. R., *Koss, K. J., Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (2011).
Parental problem drinking, marital aggression, and child emotional insecurity: A
longitudinal investigation. Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, 72, 711-722.

81. *Martin, M. J., *Bascoe, S. M., & Davies, P.T. (2011). Family relationships. In B. Brown &
M. Prinstein (Eds.), Encyclopedia of Adolescence.(pp. 84-94). Maryland Heights, MO:
Elsevier.

82. Sturge-Apple, M. L., Davies, P. T., Cicchetti, D., *Manning, L. G., & *Raines, K. E. (2012).
Interparental violence, maternal emotional unavailability, and children's cortisol
functioning in family contexts. Developmental Psychology, 48, 237-249.

83. Sturge-Apple, M. L., *Skibo, M. A., & Davies, P. T. (2012). The impact of parental conflict
and emotional abuse on children and families. Partner Abuse, 3, 379-400.

84. Sturge-Apple, M. L., Davies, P. T., *Martin, M. J., Cicchetti, D., & *Hentges, R. G (2012).
An examination of the impact of harsh parenting contexts on children’s adaptation within
an evolutionary framework. Developmental Psychology, 48, 791-805.

85. Cummings, E. M., *George, M. R. W., *McCoy, K. P., & Davies, P. T. (2012). Interparental
conflict in kindergarten and adolescent adjustment: Prospective investigation of
emotional security as an explanatory mechanism. Child Development, 83, 1703-1715.

86. Davies, P. T., Sturge-Apple, M. L., Cicchetti, D., *Manning, L. G., & *Vonhold, S E. (2012).
Pathways and processes of risk in associations among maternal antisocial personality
symptoms, interparental aggression, and preschooler’s psychopathology, Development
and Psychopathology, 807-832. [Special Issue: “Multilevel Approaches Toward
Understanding Antisocial Behavior: Current Research and Future Directions”]

87. Sturge-Apple, M. L., Cicchetti, D., Davies, P. T., & *Suor, J. H. (2012). Differential
susceptibility in spillover between interparental conflict and maternal parenting practices:
Evidence for OXTR and 5-HT genes. Journal of Family Psychology, 26, 431-442.

88. Davies, P. T., Cicchetti, D., & *Martin, M. J. (2012). Towards greater specificity identifying
associations among interparental aggression, child emotional reactivity to conflict, and
child problems. Child Development, 83, 1789-1804.

89. Davies, P. T., *Martin, M. J., & Cicchetti, D. (2012). Delineating the sequelae of destructive
and constructive interparental conflict for children within an evolutionary framework.
Developmental Psychology, 48, 939-955.

90. *Bascoe, S. M., Davies, P. T., & Cummings, E. M. (2012). Beyond warmth and conflict: The
developmental utility of a boundary conceptualization of sibling relationship processes.
Child Development, 83, 2121-2138.
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 16

91. Davies, P. T., *Manning, L. G., & Cicchetti, D. (2013). Tracing the developmental cascade
of children’s insecurity in the interparental relationship: The role of stage-salient tasks.
Child Development, 84, 297-312.
92. Davies, P.T., Sturge-Apple, M.L., & *Martin, M. J. (2013). Family discord and child health:
An emotional security formulation. In A. Booth, N. Landale, & S. M. McHale (Eds.),
Families and child health (pp. 45-74). New York: Springer.

93. *Koss, K. J., *George, M.R.W. Davies, P.T., Cicchetti, D., Cummings, E. M., & Sturge-
Apple, M. L. (2013). Patterns of children’s adrenocortical reactivity to interparental
conflict and associations with child adjustment: A growth mixture modeling approach.
Developmental Psychology, 49, 317-326.

94. Cummings, E. M., *George, M., *Koss, K., & Davies, P. T. (2013). Longitudinal study of a
family process model of maternal and paternal depressive symptoms: Exploring multiple
relations with parenting processes and child adjustment. Parenting: Science and Practice,
13, 213-232.

95. Cummings, E. M., *Cheung, R. Y. M., & Davies, P. T. (2013). Prospective relations between
parent depression, negative expressiveness, emotional insecurity, and children’s
internalizing symptoms. Child Psychiatry and Human Development, 44, 698-708.

96. Davies, P.T., Cicchetti, D., *Hentges, R. F., & Sturge-Apple, M. L. (2013). The genetic
precursors and the advantageous and disadvantageous sequelae of inhibited
temperament: An evolutionary perspective. Developmental Psychology, 49, 2285-2300.

97. *McCoy, K. P., *George, M. R. W., Cummings, E. M. & Davies, P. T. (2013). Constructive
and destructive marital conflict, parenting, and children’s school and social adjustment.
Social Development, 22, 641-662.

98. Davies, P. T., & *Martin, M. J. (2013). The reformulation of emotional security theory: The
role of children’s social defense in developmental psychopathology. Development and
Psychopathology, 25, 1435- 1454. [Special Issue: “Development and Psychopathology: A
Vision Realized”]

99. Davies, P.T., Sturge-Apple, M. L., *Bascoe, S. M., & Cummings, E. M. (2014). The legacy
of early insecurity histories in shaping adolescent adaptation to interparental conflict.
Child Development, 85, 338-354.

100. Davies, P. T., & Cicchetti, D. (2014). How and why does the 5-HTTLPR gene moderate
associations between maternal unresponsiveness and children’s problems? Child
Development, 85, 484-500.
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 17

101. Davies, P. T., & Sturge-Apple, M. L. (2014). Family context in the development of
psychopathology. In M. Lewis & K. Rudolph (Eds), Handbook of developmental
psychopathology (3rd edition, pp. 143-161). New York: Springer.

102. *Koss, K. J., *George, M.R.W., Cummings, E. M., Davies, P.T., El-Sheikh, M., &
Cicchetti, D. (2014). Asymmetry in children’s salivary cortisol and alpha-amylase in the
context of martial conflict: Links to children’s emotional security and adjustment.
Developmental Psychobiology, 56, 836-849.

103. *Etkin, R., *Koss, K.J., Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (2014). The differential impact
of parental warmth on externalizing problems among triangulated adolescents. Journal of
Genetic Psychology, 175, 118-133.

104. *Martin, M. J., Davies, P. T., & *MacNeill, L. (2014). Social defense: An evolutionary-
developmental model of children’s strategies for coping with threat in the peer group.
Evolutionary Psychology, 12, 364-385.

105. *George, M.W., Fairchild, A.J., Cummings, E.M., & Davies, P.T. (2014). Marital conflict
in early childhood and adolescent disordered eating: Emotional insecurity as an
explanatory mechanism. Eating Behaviors, 15, 532-539. DOI:
10.1016/j.eatbeh.2014.06.006

106. *Manning, L. G., Davies, P. T., & Cicchetti, D. (2014) Interparental violence and early
childhood adjustment: A mediated moderation examination of maternal sensitivity as a
protective factor. Child Development, 85, 2263-2278. DOI: 10.1111/cdev.12279

107. *Bergman, K. N., Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (2014). Interparental aggression,
emotional insecurity, adolescent adjustment, and the moderating role of adrenocortical
activity. Journal of Family Violence, 29, 763-771.

108. Davies, P. T., & *Martin, M. J. (2014). Children’s coping and adjustment in high conflict
homes: The reformulation of emotional security theory. Child Development Perspectives,
8, 242-249.

109. Sturge-Apple, M. L., Davies, P. T., *Fittoria, M., & Cicchetti, D. (2014). Typologies of
interparental conflict and parenting practices in high-risk families: Examining spillover
and compensatory models and implications for child adjustment. Development and
Psychopathology, 26, 983-998.

110. Cummings, E. M., *Cheung, R.Y., *Koss, K. J., Davies, P. T. (2014). Parent depressive
symptoms and adolescent adjustment: A prospective test of an explanatory model for the
role of marital conflict. Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 42, 1153-1166.
DOI: 10.1007/s10802-014-9860-2
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 18

111. Davies, P. T., Cicchetti, D., & *Hentges, R. F. (2015). Maternal unresponsiveness and child
disruptive problems: The interplay of uninhibited temperament and dopamine transporter
genes. Child Development, 86, 63-79. DOI: 10.1111/cdev.12281

112. Cummings, E. M., *Koss, K. J., & Davies, P. T. (2015). Prospective relations between
family conflict and adolescent maladjustment: Security in the family system as an
explanatory mechanism. Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 43, 503-515.

113. *Suor, J. H., Sturge-Apple, M. L., Davies, P. T., Cicchetti, D., & *Manning, L. G. (2015).
Tracing differential pathways of risk: Associations among family adversity, cortisol, and
cognitive functioning in childhood. Child Development, 86, 1142-1158.

114. Davies, P. T., *Coe, J. L., *Martin, M. J., Sturge-Apple, M. L., & Cummings, E. M. (2015).
The developmental costs and benefits of children’s involvement in interparental conflict.
Developmental Psychology, 51, 1026-1047.

115. *Hentges, R. F., Davies, P. T., & Cicchetti, D. (2015). Temperament and interparental
conflict: The role of negative emotionality in predicting child behavioral problems. Child
Development, 86, 1333-1350.

116. Davies, P. T., *Martin, M. J., & Sturge-Apple, M. L. (2016). Emotional security theory
and developmental psychopathology. In D. Cicchetti (Ed.), Developmental
Psychopathology: Vol. 1. Theory and Methods (3rd ed., 199-264). New York: Wiley.

117. Davies, P. T., *Hentges, R. F., & Sturge-Apple, M. L. (2016). Identifying the
temperamental roots of children’s patterns of security in the interparental relationship.
Development and Psychopathology, 28, 355-370.

118. Davies, P. T., *Martin, M. J., *Coe, J. L., & Cummings, E. M. (2016). Transactional
cascades of destructive interparental conflict, children’s emotional insecurity, and
psychological problems across childhood and adolescence. Development and
Psychopathology, 28, 653-671. [Special Issue: “Longitudinal Transactional Models of
Development and Psychopathology”]

119. Davies, P. T., *Hentges, R. F., *Coe, J. L., *Martin, M. J., Sturge-Apple, M. L., &
Cummings, E. M. (2016). The multiple faces of interparental conflict: Implications for
cascades of children’s insecurity and externalizing problems. Journal of Abnormal
Psychology, 125, 664-678.

120. Sturge-Apple, M. L., *Suor, J. H., Davies, P. T., Cicchetti, D., *Skibo, M. A., & Rogosch,
F. A. (2016). Vagal tone and children’s delay of gratification: Differential sensitivity
across resource poor and resource rich environments. Psychological Science, 27, 885-
893.
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 19

121. *Huggins, C. E., Sturge-Apple, M. L., & Davies, P. T. (2016). Demand and withdraw
behavior and emotion in mother-adolescent conflict. In J. A. Samp (Ed.), Communicating
interpersonal conflict in close relationships: Contexts, challenges, and opportunities (pp.
165-184). New York: Routledge.

122. *Cheung, R. Y. M., Cummings, E. M., Zhang, Z., & Davies, P. T., (2016). Trivariate
modeling of interparental conflict and adolescent emotional security: An examination of
mother-father-child dynamics. Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 45, 2236-2352.

123. Davies, P. T., *Martin, M. J., Sturge-Apple M. L., *Ripple, M. T., & Cicchetti, D. (2016).
Delineating the sequelae of children’s coping with interparental conflict: Testing the
reformulated emotional security theory. Developmental Psychology, 52, 1646-1665.

124. *Zemp, M., Milek, A., Davies, P. T., & Bodenmann G. (2016). Improved child problem
behavior enhances the parents’ relationship satisfaction: A randomized trial. Journal of
Family Psychology, 30, 896-906.

125. *Coe, J. L., Davies, P. T., & Sturge-Apple, M. L. (2017). The multivariate roles of family
instability and interparental conflict in predicting children’s representations in the family
system and early school adjustment problems. Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology,
45, 211-224.

126. *Koss, K. J., Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (2017). Patterns of adolescent regulatory
responses during family conflict and mental health trajectories. Journal of Research on
Adolescence, 27, 229-245.

127. *Martin, M. J., Sturge-Apple, M. L., Davies, P. T., *Romero, C. V., & *Buckholz, A.
(2017). A process model of the implications of spillover from coparenting conflicts into
the parent-child attachment relationship in adolescence. Development and
Psychopathology, 29, 417-431. [Special Issue: “Attachment in the Context of Atypical
Caregiving”]

128. *Martin, M. J., Sturge-Apple, M. L., Davies, P. T., & Romero, C. V. (2017). Mothers’
implicit representations of their adolescent as unlovable: Explanatory factor linking
family conflict and harsh parenting. Developmental Psychology, 53, 1344-1355.

129. Sturge-Apple, M., Davies, P.T., Cicchetti, D., *Hentges, R., F., & *Coe, J. L. (2017).
Poverty and children’s delay of gratification: When a bird in the hand is worth two in the
bush. Development and Psychopathology, 29, 685-696.

130. *Sour, J. H., Sturge-Apple, M. L., Davies, P. T., & Cicchetti, D. (2017). A life history
approach to delineating how harsh environments and Hawk temperament shape
children’s cognitive problem-solving skills. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry,
58, 902-909.
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 20

131. *Martin, M. J., Davies, P. T., & Cummings, E. M. (2017). Distinguishing attachment and
affiliation in early adolescents’ narrative descriptions of their best friendship. Journal of
Research on Adolescence, 27, 644-660.

132. *Martin, M. J., Davies, P. T., Cummings, E. M., & Cicchetti, D. (2017). The mediating
roles of cortisol reactivity and executive functioning difficulties in the pathways between
childhood histories of emotional insecurity and adolescent school problems.
Development
and Psychopathology, 29, 1483-1498.

133. Davies, P. T., *Martin, M. J., & Cummings, E. M. (2018). Interparental conflict and
children’s social problems: Insecurity and friendship affiliation as cascading mediators.
Developmental Psychology, 54, 83-97.

134. Davies, P. T., *Coe, J. L., *Hentges, R. F., Sturge-Apple, M. L., & van der Kloet, E. (2018).
The interplay among children’s negative family representations, visual processing
of negative emotions, and externalizing symptoms. Child Development, 89, 663-680.

135. *Coe, J. L., Davies, P. T., & Sturge-Apple, M. L. (2018). How close is too close? Family
cohesion versus enmeshment as moderators of associations between interparental
relationship instability and young children’s externalizing problems. Journal of Family
Psychology, 32, 289-298.

136. *Ha, A. P., *Bergman, K. N., Davies, P. T., & Cummings, E. M. (2018). Parental post
conflict communications: Implications for children’s adjustment outcomes. Family Court
Review, 56, 219-233.

137. *Bergman, K. N., *Choe, G. E., Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (2018). The
ubiquitous family environment: Examining emotional insecurity in the family and
adjustment in school. Family Court Review, 56, 234-247.

138. Davies, P. T., *Coe, J. L., *Hentges, R. F., Sturge-Apple, M. L., & Ripple, M. T. (2018).
Interparental hostility and children’s externalizing symptoms: Attention to anger as a
mediator. Developmental Psychology, 54, 1290-1303.

139. *Coe, J. L., Davies, P. T., & Sturge-Apple, M. L. (2018). Family instability and young
children’s school adjustment: Callousness and negative internal representations as
mediators. Child Development, 89, 1193-1208.

140. Warmuth, K.A., Cummings, E.M., & Davies, P.T. (2018). Child behavioral dysregulation as
a mediator between destructive marital conflict and children’s symptoms of
psychopathology. Journal of Child and Family Studies, 27, 2004-2013.
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 21
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 22

141. Cheung, R. Y. M., *Boise, C., Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (2018). Mothers' and
fathers' roles in child adjustment: Parenting behaviors and mothers' emotion
socialization as predictors. Journal of Child and Family Studies, 27, 4033-4043.

142. *Koss, K. J., Cummings, E, M., Davies, P. T., Hetzel, S, & Cicchetti, D. (2018). Harsh
parenting and serotonin transporter and BDNF Val 66 Met polymorphisms as predictors
of adolescent depressive symptoms. Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent
Psychology, 27, 229-245.

143. Davies, P. T., & *Coe, J. L. (2019). Family relationship dynamics: A developmental
perspective. In B. Fiese (Eds.), APA Handbook of Contemporary Family Psychology
(Vol. 1: Foundations, Methods, and Contemporary Issues Across the Lifespan; pp. 163-
185). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.

144. *Gao, M. M., Du, H., Davies, P. T., & Cummings, E. M. (2019). Marital conflict
behaviors and parenting: Dyadic links over time. Family Relations, 68, 135-149.

145. Davies, P. T., *Pearson, J. K., Cicchetti, D., Martin, M. J., & Cummings, E. M. (2019).
Emotional insecurity as a mediator of the moderating role of dopamine genes in the
association between interparental conflict and youth externalizing problems.
Development and Psychopathology, 31, 1111-1126. [Special Issue: “Emotion
Dysregulation and Emerging Psychopathology”]

146. Martin, M. J., Sturge-Apple, M. L., Davies, P. T., & *Gutierrez, G. (2019). Attachment
behavior and hostility as explanatory factors linking parent-adolescent conflict and
adolescent adjustment. Journal of Family Psychology, 33, 586-596.

147. Davies, P. T., *Thompson, M. J., *Coe, J. L., Sturge-Apple, M. L., & Martin, M. J. (2019).
Child response processes as mediators of the association between caregiver intimate
relationship instability and children’s externalizing symptoms. Developmental
Psychology, 55, 1244-1258.

148. *Gao, M. M., *deSilva, DD, Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (2019). Interrelatedness
of children’s physiological and psychological responses to interparental conflict: A
moderating role of parenting. Social Development, 28, 1016-1036.

149. *Suor, J. H., Sturge-Apple, M. L., Davies, P. T., & *Jones-Gordils, H. R. (2019). The
interplay between parenting and temperament in associations with children’s executive
function. Journal of Family Psychology. 33, 841– 850.

150. *Li, Z., Sturge-Apple, M. L., Martin, M. J., & Davies, P. T., (2019). Interactive effects of
family instability and adolescent stress reactivity on externalizing and internalizing
problems. Developmental Psychology, 55, 2193–2202.
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 23

151. Davies, P. T., *Parry, L. Q., Bascoe, S. M., Martin, M. J., & Cummings, E. M. (2019).
Children’s vulnerability to interparental conflict: The protective role of sibling
relationship quality. Child Development, 90, 2118-2134.

152. Davies, P. T., & *Thompson, M. J. (2020). Towards a family process perspective on
typical and maladaptive personality characteristics: Commentary on environmental and
sociocultural influences on personality disorders. In C. W. Lejuez & K. L. Gratz (Eds.),
Handbook of Personality Disorders (pp. 68-71). New York: Cambridge University Press.

154. Sturge-Apple, M. L., Martin, M. J., *Gordils-Jones, H. R., *Li, Z., & Davies, P. T. (2020).
Mothers’ and fathers’ self-regulation capacity and hostile parenting during early
adolescence: A process-oriented approach. Development and Psychopathology, 32, 229-
241.

153. Davies, P. T., *Coe, J. L., *Hentges, R. F., Sturge-Apple, M. L., & Ripple, M. T. (2020).
Temperamental emotionality attributes as antecedents of children’s social information

processing. Child Development, 91, 508-526.

155. *Coe, J. L., Davies, P. T., *Hentges, R. F., & Sturge-Apple, M. L. (2020). Understanding
the nature of associations between family instability, parenting difficulties, and children’s
externalizing symptoms. Development and Psychopathology, 32, 257-269.

156. *Thompson, M. J., Davies, P. T., Hentges, R. F., Sturge-Apple, M. L., & Parry, L. Q.
(2020). Understanding how and why effortful control moderates children’s
vulnerability to interparental conflict. Developmental Psychology, 56, 937-950.

157. Davies, P. T., Cicchetti, D., *Thompson, M. J., Bascoe, S. M., & Cummings, E. M. (2020).
The interplay of polygenic plasticity and adrenocortical activity as sources of
variability in pathways among family adversity, youth emotional reactivity, and
psychological problems. Development and Psychopathology, 32, 587-603.

158. *Jacques, D. T., Sturge-Apple, M. L., Davies, P. T., & Cicchetti, D. (in press). Maternal
alcohol dependence and harsh caregiving across parenting contexts: The moderating role
of child negative emotionality. Development and Psychopathology.

159. Warmuth, K. A., Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (in press). Constructive and destructive
conflict, poor parenting, and children’s symptoms of psychopathology. Journal of Family
Psychology.

160. *Koçak, A., Mouratidis, A., Uçanok, Z., Selçuk, E., & Davies, P.T. (in press). Need
satisfaction as a mediator of associations between interparental relationship dimensions
and autonomy-supportive parenting: A diary study. Family Process.
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 24

161. *Parry, L. Q., Davies, P. T., Sturge-Apple, M. L., & *Coe, J. L. (in press). Coparental
discord and children’s behavior problems: Children’s negative family representations as
an explanatory mechanism. Journal of Family Psychology.

162. *Nuttall, A. K., Valentino, K., Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (in press).
Contextualizing children’s caregiving responses to interparental conflict: Advancing
assessment of parentification. Journal of Family Psychology. [Special Issue: “New
Conceptualizations in the Study of Family Context”]

163. *Li, Z., Sturge-Apple, M. L., Davies, P. T., & Lui, S. (in press). Integrating a multilevel
approach to examine family conflicts and parent-adolescent physiological synchrony.
Journal of Family Psychology.

164. *van Eldik, W., M., de Haan, A., *Parry, L. Q., Davies, P. T., Lujik, M., Arends, L. R., &
Prinzie, P. (in press). The interparental relationship: Meta-analytic associations with
children’s maladjustment and responses to conflict. Psychological Bulletin.

165. *Li, Z., Sturge-Apple, M. L., Liu, S., & Davies, P. T. (in press). Parent-adolescent
physiological synchrony: Moderating effects of adolescent emotional insecurity.
Psychophysiology.

166. Davies, P. T., *Thompson, M. J., *Hentges, R. F., *Coe, J. L., & Sturge-Apple, M. L.
(in press). Children’s attentional biases to emotions as sources of variability in their
vulnerability to interparental conflict. Developmental Psychology.

167. Davies, P. T., *Thompson, M. J., Martin, M. J., & Cummings, E. M. (in press). The vestiges
of childhood interparental conflict: Adolescent sensitization to recent interparental
conflict. Child Development.

168. *Coe, J. L., Davies, P. T., *Hentges, R. F., & Sturge-Apple, M. L. (in press). Detouring in
the family system as an antecedent of children’s adjustment problems. Journal of Family
Psychology.

169. Davies, P. T., *Parry, L. Q., Bascoe, S. M., Cicchetti, D. & Cummings, E. M. (in press).
Interparental conflict as a curvilinear risk factor in pathogenic cascades of emotional
and adrenocortical reactivity. Developmental Psychology.

170. *Li, Z., Sturge-Apple, M. L., Martin, M. J., Russell, J. D., & Davies, P. T. (in press). The
role of emotion processing in the association between parental discipline and adolescent
socio-emotional development. Journal of Research on Adolescence.
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 25

MANUSCRIPTS SUBMITTED FOR PUBLICATION

Davies, P. T., *Pearson, J. K., *Coe, J. L., *Hentges, R. F., & Sturge-Apple, M. L. (2020).
Beyond destructive and constructive interparental conflict: Children’s psychological
vulnerability to interparental disorganization. Manuscript submitted for publication.

*Jones-Gordils, H. R., Sturge-Apple, M. L., & Davies, P. T. (2019). Maternal executive


functions, maternal discipline, and children’s school readiness: A process-oriented
approach. Manuscript submitted for publication.

*Koçak, A., Mouratidis, A., Uçanok, Z., Selçuk, E., & Davies, P.T. (2019). Explaining the Link
between Interparental Conflict and Adolescent Adjustment through Spillover Hypothesis
and Self-Determination Theory. Manuscript submitted for publication.

Sturge-Apple, M. L., *Jacques, D. T., Davies, P. T., & Cicchetti, D. (2020). Maternal power
assertive discipline and children’s adjustment: A social domain theory approach.
Manuscript submitted for publication.

*Thompson, M. J., Davies, P. T., *Hentges, R. F., & Sturge-Apple, M. L. (2020). Delineating
the developmental sequelae of children’s maladaptive involvement in interparental
conflict. Manuscript submitted for publication.

*van Eldik, W. M., Davies, P. T., de Haan, A. D., Arends, L. R., Cummings, E. M., & Prinzie, P.
(2019). A within-family analysis of the interplay among interparental conflict, adolescent
emotional insecurity, and psychological problems. Manuscript submitted for publication.

*Warmuth, K.A., Cummings, E. M., & Davies, P. T. (2020). Mother-child attachment and
externalizing trajectories in boys and girls. Manuscript submitted for publication.

INVITED SCHOLARLY PRESENTATIONS

Association for Psychological Science Convention (2017) Cross-Cutting Themes Program


American Psychological Association APA Division 7 Awards Ceremony (2002)
Brown University
Florida Atlantic University
Iowa State University
Ohio State University
Mt. Hope Family Center, University of Rochester (3)
Pennsylvania State University
Research Institute on Addictions
Syracuse University
State University of New York at Buffalo
State University of New York at Geneseo
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 26

University of Alabama at Birmingham


University of Denver
University of Missouri (Distinguished Lecture Series)
University of Pittsburgh
University of Rochester
University of Rochester Medical Center

CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS (Number per year)

1990: 1
1991: 1
1992: 1
1993: 3
1994: 2
1995: 1
1996: 0
1997: 2
1998: 1
1999: 2
2000: 2
2001: 5
2002: 5
2003: 3
2004: 6
2005: 13
2006: 0
2007: 9
2008: 10
2009: 19
2010: 6
2011: 21
2012: 3
2013: 19
2014: 7
2015: 13
2016: 2
2017: 12
2018: 3
2019: 14

INSTITUTIONAL AND PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

Grant Research Consultant:


Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 27

Cicchetti, D., & Toth, S. L. (1998), University of Rochester


Hops, H., Davis, B., & Sheeber, L. (2001), Oregon Research Institute
Wood, B. L. (2001), University of Buffalo.
Seifer, R., & Dickstein, S. (2004), Brown University
Tully, E. & Goodman, S. (2005), Emory University

External Evaluator for Hiring, Promotion, and/or Tenure:


Auburn University (6)
Bowling Green State University
Bradley University
Case Western Reserve University (2)
Catholic University
George Mason University
George Washington University
Johns Hopkins University
Ohio State University (2)
Miami University
Pennsylvania State University (4)
Syracuse University (2)
State University of New York at Buffalo (2)
State University of New York at Buffalo, Research Institute on Addictions
State University of New York at Albany
Tulane University
University of Arizona
University of California, Davis (2)
University of California, Irvine
University of California, Los Angeles
University of Connecticut, School of Medicine
University of Delaware
University of Georgia
University of Kentucky
University of Massachusetts Amherst
University of Michigan
University of New Mexico
University of Rochester Medical Center
University of Southern California (2)
University of Texas at Austin
University of Wisconsin – Madison (3)
Virginia Commonwealth University
Virginia Tech
Wayne State University

International External Examiner of Doctoral Thesis:


Griffith University, Australia
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 28

Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands

THESIS AND DISSERTATION RESEARCH

Davies, P. T. (1993). Emotional arousal and children's responses to adult conflict. Unpublished
master's thesis, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV. (Thesis chair: E. Mark
Cummings). [Davies & Cummings, 1995].

Davies, P. T. (1995). Children's Emotional Security as a Mediator of the Link Between Marital
Conflict and Child Adjustment. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, West Virginia
University, Morgantown, WV. (Dissertation chair: E. Mark Cummings). [Davies &
Cummings, 1998; Davies & Forman, 2002].

TEACHING ACTIVITIES

West Virginia University: (1992-1995)

Social Psychology (Instructor): 8 undergraduate classes; about 65 students per class


Undergraduate Teaching Practicum (Supervisor)
Undergraduate Directed Studies (Instructor)
Family Systems Theory, Undergraduate Directed Studies, Writing Course (Instructor):
Undergraduate Honor's Theses (Supervisor):

University of Rochester: (1997 to present)

Undergraduate:
Developmental Child Psychopathology (Instructor; Large Course)
Social and Emotional Development (Instructor; Large Course)
Seminar in Social and Personality Development (Instructor; Seminar Course)
Internship in Psychology (Instructor; Guided Study Course)
Independent Research Studies (Instructor; Guided Study Course)
Exploring Research in Family Psychology I and II (Instructor, Seminar Courses)
Honor’s Seminar (Instructor, Seminar Course)
Honor’s Research I and II (Supervisor, Undergraduate Course)

Graduate:
Family Processes in Childhood (Instructor; Developmental Program Elective Course)
Seminar in Interpersonal Development (Instructor, Breadth Requirement Course)
Developmental Theory and Research (Instructor, Developmental Core Course)
Developmental Research Methods (Instructor, Developmental Core Course)
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 29

UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE THESES ADVISOR (1999-Present)

Undergraduate Honor’s Theses (Chair/Adviser)

Lu, Bei (2019). Temperamental traits and involvement styles in interparental conflict:
Identifying children’s temperament as a predictor.
Price, Veronica (2013). The moderating role of temperament in associations between family
instability and child functioning.
Seelig, Sandra (2011). Triadic processes, the sibling relationship, and adolescent adjustment: A
family systems perspective
Muto, Pauline (2011). Interparental conflict and child attention: The moderating role of child
temperament.
Anderson, Ellen (2010). Children’s emotional insecurity in the interparental relationship as a
precursor to neuropsychological deficits.
Arva, Jennifer (2009). The impact of interparental conflict on adolescent peer relationships.
Cheon, Yeun Mi (2009). Antecedents of maternal communication about interparental conflict to
children: The role of child characteristics.
George, Rachael (2008). Developmental consequences of children’s patterns of reactivity to peer
transgressions.
Modzelewski, Natalie (2007). The effects of children’s negative behaviors on parental warmth.
Biswas, Aparajita (2005). Expressed emotion as a mediator in the link between marital conflict
and hostile attributional bias: Elucidating the links between marital conflict and child
adjustment problems.
Walling, Julia (2004). Family and Child Correlates of Profiles of Child Involvement in
Interparental Conflict.
Meyer, Sara (2002). The Interplay Between Family Instability and Parental Communication in
Predicting Children’s Family Representations.
Swanger, Michelle (2002). The Roles of Aggression and Inhibitory Control in the Relationship
Between Marital Conflict and Children’s Reactivity.
Henrie, Sharon (2002). Religious Involvement, Life Events and Outcomes.
Klock, Kristin (2000). Marital Conflict and Adolescent Adjustment: The Protective and
Potentiating Role of Developmental Tasks.
Sawyer, Genelle (1999). Interrelations among Adolescent-Parent Attachment, Peer
Representations, and Maladjustment.
Shannon, Kelly (1999). Exploring Pathways among Maternal Psychological Control, Parent-
Adolescent Attachment Patterns, and Adolescent Adjustment.

Master’s Theses (Adviser)

Parry, Lucia Q. (2019). Coparental discord and children’s behavior problems: Children’s
negative family representations as explanatory mechanisms.
Thompson, Morgan J. (2018). How and why effortful control moderates children’s vulnerability
to interparental conflict.
Coe, Jesse L. (2015). The developmental costs and benefits of family systems boundary
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 30

disturbances: A function-based approach.


Hentges, Rochelle F. (2013). Temperament and interparental conflict: The role of negative
emotionality in predicting child adjustment.
Manning, Liviah. G. (2011). Parental psychopathology and parenting disruptions: An
examination of commonalities and specificity between disorders
Woitach (Martin), Meredith (2009). Children's social information processing and the
development of psychopathology symptoms: A person-based analysis of SIP from an
evolutionary framework. 
Bascoe, Sonnette (2007). Children’s internal representations of the interparental and parent-
child relationship, children’s poor peer information processing, and children’s
adjustment problems.
Farrell, Deirdre (2005). Interparental conflict and children’s emotional reactivity: Examining
the additive and moderating role of children’s temperament.
Gomulak, Beata (2004). “Don’t worry, we’re going to work it out:” The role of maternal
communication in the pathway between interparental conflict and child psychosocial
adjustment.
Winter, Marcia (2002). Linking family and peer contexts: Mothers’ explicit communication and
children’s representations of peers.
Rasi (Tesak), Jennifer (2001). Pathways among marital conflict, parental emotional availability,
and children’s emotional security response systems.
Lindsay, Lisa (1999). Marital conflict and adolescent adjustment: Why does gender moderate
early adolescent risk?

Doctoral Dissertations (Adviser)

Coe, J. L. (2018). The interplay among environmental unpredictability, harshness, children’s


physiological reactivity to stress, and risky behavior in early childhood.
Manning, L. G. (2016). The protective role of stage-salient skills in early childhood exposure
to interparental violence.
Hentges, R. F. (2015). Toward greater specificity in identifying the developmental consequences
of a risky temperamental phenotype: An evolutionary perspective. Recipient of the
Outstanding Dissertation Award Commendation, Social Sciences Division, University of
Rochester
Martin, M. J. (2014). Delineating the functions of attachment and affiliation in early
adolescents’ internal working models of their best friendship. Recipient of the
Outstanding Dissertation Award Commendation, Social Sciences Division, University of
Rochester
Bascoe, S. M. (2012). Beyond phenotypical forms of family behaviors: The developmental
utility of a boundary conceptualization of triadic relationship processes. Recipient of the
Outstanding Dissertation Award, Social Sciences Division, University of Rochester
Gomulak-Cavicchio, B. (2009). Talking to kids about interparental disagreements: A
longitudinal examination of multiple determinants of maternal post-conflict
communication.
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 31

Winter, Marcia (2005). The interplay between family instability and maternal communication
patterns in predicting children’s family representations and symptomatology.
Tesak, Jennifer (2005). An exploration of children’s involvement strategies for coping with
interparental conflict.
Spomer, Michelle (2003). Early parenting and youth adjustment: A longitudinal investigation of
temperament and parent-child separations as moderating factors.
Lindsay, Lisa (2001). The family conflict intervention program: A pilot of school-based groups
for second- and third-grade children.
Forman, Evan (1999). Family instability and adolescent adjustment: An exploration of
intrapsychic and parenting mediating mechanisms.

UNIVERSITY SERVICES AND COMMITTEES

West Virginia University (1990-1995):


Developmental Training Committee (90-91, 92-93)
Developmental Research Suite Coordinator (90-91, 92-93)
Program Area Organizing Committee for Interview Weekend (91, 93)
Faculty Evaluation Committee (94-95)

University of Rochester (1997 - Present)


Department-Library Liaison (97-01; 03-04; 05-06, 09-10)
University Council on Graduate Studies (98, 02-04)
Committee on Graduate Studies (98-01)
Colloquium Committee (99-00, 08-10; 13-15; 17-19)
Recruiting and Admissions Committee (00-02, 08-09)
Organizer of the Developmental Program Brown Bag Lunch Series (00-01; 15-16)
Interim Director, Developmental Psychology Program (00-01; 15-16)
Undergraduate Studies Committee, Student Advisor (02-04; 06-13; 17)
Co-Director, Psychology Undergraduate Honor’s Program (98-00; 02-04)
Faculty Committee, Curtis Awards for Excellence in Teaching by a Graduate Student
(04)
Graduate Studies Committee; Chair (10-14)
Departmental Faculty Search Committee: Clinical and Developmental Programs (02-08;
12-13; 16-17)
Faculty Council (05-08)
Social Sciences Working Group (College Strategic Planning Group) (05-06)
Department Long-Term Vision Committee (06-07)
Provost Fellowship Committee (07)
Department Promotion and Tenure Committee (07-present)
Department Promotion and Tenure Committee, Chair (12-13; 14-15, 18-19)
Co-Organizer, Brown Bag Research Presentation Series Mt. Hope Family Center (07-
present)
College Student Course Evaluation Committee (08)
Patrick Davies Curriculum Vitae Page 32

Provost’s Multi-Disciplinary Research Fund Review Committee (08-09)


Member, National Institute of Health Grant Panel, University of Rochester Grant Panel
Forum (09)
Outstanding Dissertation Award Committee, Social Sciences Division, College of
Arts, Sciences, and Engineering (07-08; 10-11; 20)
Administrative Committee, College of Arts, Sciences, and Engineering (10-13)
Social Sciences Faculty Planning Committee, College of Arts, Sciences, and Engineering
(13)
Departmental Seed Money Grant Committee (14-15)
Ad Hoc Tenure Evaluation Committee, College of Arts, Sciences, and Engineering
(14,18)
Interim Director, Developmental Psychology Program (00-01, 07-08, 15-16)
Scholarship Oversight Committee, University of Rochester Medical Center, Division of
Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics, Dr. Kenneth Shamlian (18 – present)
Lab, studio based, experiential courses- task force (20)

PROFESSIONAL REFERENCES [available upon request].

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