Naomi Ekas

Department Chair & Professor of Psychology

  • Fort Worth TX UNITED STATES
  • Psychology

Naomi Ekas is an expert in autistic and non-autistic children's emotional development.

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Biography

Naomi Ekas's research program utilizes a developmental psychology approach to understanding children’s social and emotional development. She studies how both intrinsic (e.g., temperament) and extrinsic (e.g., parenting quality) factors impact children’s emotion regulation and mental health. She studies these processes in autistic and non-autistic children using a variety of research methods.

Areas of Expertise

Marital Conflict
Emerging Adulthood
Parenting
Emotion Regulation
Caregiver Care for Families with Autism
Autism
Early Infant Development (Birth to Age 3)
Emotional Development
Adolescence
College Students
Marital Relationship

Accomplishments

Society for the Teaching of Psychology Faculty Development Award

2012

Eli J. and Helen Shaheen Graduate School Award

University of Notre Dame, 2009

Outstanding Graduate Student Teacher Award for Excellence in Teaching

University of Notre Dame, 2008

Education

University of Notre Dame

Ph.D.

Developmental Psychology

2009

Advisor: Julia M. Braungart Rieker, Ph.D.
Dissertation: Adaptation to stress in mothers of children with autism with autism spectrum
disorder: The role of positive affect and personality factors

University of Notre Dame

M.A.

Developmental Psychology

2007

Advisor: Julia M. Braungart-Rieker, Ph.D.
Thesis: Toddlers’ behavioral strategies with mothers and fathers

University of California, Davis

B.A.

Psychology with Highest Honors

2005

Affiliations

  • International Society for Research in Autism : Member
  • International Society for Infant Studies : Member
  • The Society for Research in Child Development : Member

Languages

  • English

Media Appearances

Male versus female college students react differently to helicopter parenting, study finds

Medical Xpress  online

2017-04-05

Helicopter parenting reduces the well-being of young women, while the failure to foster independence harms the well-being of young men but not young women.

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Raising a child with autism: How optimism can help to cope

ScienceDaily  online

2016-05-09

Humans are resilient, even facing the toughest of life's challenges. How individuals and families deal with demanding and emotionally charged circumstances plays a large role in how they view and face the world and the possible outcomes of a difficult situation. There's no exception for the challenging Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and how families adjust and cope with the reported stress of raising a child with autism.

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Can a TV sitcom reduce anti-Muslim bigotry?

The Christian Science Monitor  online

2016-01-30

Countering prejudice might be as easy as kicking back with the right sitcom.

That's according to new research that suggests media that depict Muslim characters in a positive, relatable way, can counter prejudiced attitudes toward Muslims.

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Articles

A Pilot Study of Responses to Interparental Conflict in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder

Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders

2021

Research supports that parents of children with ASD experience higher rates of marital conflict compared to parents of neurotypically developing (NT) children; however, no known research examining reactions to interparental conflict in children with ASD exists. This study compared emotional, behavioral, and physiological responses to interparental conflict in ASD (n = 21) and NT children (n = 29).

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An Exploratory Study of the Impact of Adoption on Adoptive Siblings

Journal of Child and Family Studies

2021

There is extensive literature on the effects of early-life trauma in children who are adopted, but limited research on the effects this early-life trauma may have on the other members of the adoptive family system. This qualitative study explored the experience of adoptive siblings, defined as biological children in families who adopt children, and the impact adoption has had on them.

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The Development of Infant Emotion Regulation: Time Is of the Essence

Emotion Regulation

Naomi V. Ekas, Julie M. Braungart-Rieker, Daniel S. Messinger

2018

The ability to effectively regulate emotions is considered a hallmark of early social and emotional development and is associated with a variety of developmental outcomes. Emotion regulation is a dynamic process that involves the temporal sequencing of emotion and behavioral strategies. Despite an increased interest in and investigation of emotion regulation, however, there is little attention given to these temporal dynamics. Infancy is an especially important period during which to examine these dynamics as early development is associated with the greatest changes in emotion regulation, and emotion regulation skills, and these skills are reliably linked to later developmental outcomes (Feldman, 2009). This chapter aims to present research that focuses on the temporal dynamics of emotion regulation during infancy by presenting: (1) an overview of the development of emotion regulation during infancy; (2) traditional, global approaches to the measurement of emotion regulation during infancy; and (3) temporal, momentto-moment sequencing of emotion and regulatory strategies with an emphasis on the methodological and statistical approaches to studying temporal associations. Finally, we highlight new statistical techniques that would allow researchers to further unravel the complexities of emotion regulation during this time period.

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