Connie M. Tang
My research interests include young children鈥檚 cognitive development, children and the law, family income and its impact on parenting, social relationships and adolescent behavioral health, and emerging adulthood. Specifically, I am interested in how best to talk to young children during forensic interviews, how juvenile offenders are judged in adult courts, and how parental and peer relationships predict adolescent behavioral problems. Since young children鈥檚 vulnerability to interviewer suggestion can be partially explained by their tenuous ability to monitor the sources of their knowledge, I have also conducted research on children鈥檚 source monitoring. My first book project was Children and Crime, a 12-chapter book published in 2019. Using the central question of "Can being a victim cause a child to become a perpetrator?" as a linchpin, the book surveys topics related to the two ways children and crime intersect: Child maltreatment and juvenile delinquency. I am currently working as the lead editor in an undergraduate textbook project entitled Perspectives on Childhood: An Interdisciplinary Approach. The book will provide a comprehensive and accessible introduction to the field of childhood studies. In 12 chapters, the edited book will be written by a team of higher education teacher-scholars from diverse fields in the behavioral sciences, the health sciences, the social sciences, and the humanities.
At the present time, research assistants and I are in the middle of a project examining young children鈥檚 awareness of when they learned things and engaged in activities, which is linked to the more general topic of children鈥檚 developing time concept. The research method employed is secondary analyses of the CHIld Language Data Exchange System (CHILDES) database (now a part of TalkBank). CHILDES stores information on child language, and much of it has to do with conversations children participated in. This project is an extension of earlier experimental work to see if research findings are reflected in children鈥檚 naturalistic conversations with their parents. Our lab is currently coding data from three preschool-aged children using transcripts culled from CHILDES. Even though this is primarily basic research, the topic has applied value in understanding how young children learn and young children鈥檚 reporting of when past events occurred could have relevance in the forensic setting.
Tang, C. M., McCullough, A., & Olunlade, R. (2023). Maternal, paternal, and peer relationships differentially predict adolescent behavioral problems. Journal of Child & Adolescent Trauma, 1-12. (pdf)
Tang, C. M., Colon, M., & Brilla, H. S. (2023). Homework Completion Program in Atlantic County, NJ: The first five years. The Police Journal: Theory, Practice, and Principles. (pdf)
Tang, C.M., Nunez, N. & Estrada-Reynolds, V. (2020). Intellectual disability affects case judgment differently depending on juvenile race. Journal of Police and Criminal Psychology, 35, 228-239. (pdf)
Tang, C.M., Dickey, S. & Samuelsen, D. (2017). Young children's reports of when events occurred: Do event type and assessment method matter? Infant and Child Development, 26. (pdf)
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