1. A Social-Interactive Neuroscience Approach to Understanding the Developing Brain Elizabeth Redcay and Katherine Rice Warnell 2. Cognition-Action Trade-Offs Reflect Organization of Attention in Infancy Sarah E. Berger, Regina T. Harbourne and Melissa Horger 3. Above and Beyond Objects: The Development of Infants' Spatial Concepts Marianella Casasola 4. Children's Developing Ideas About Knowledge and Its Acquisition Samuel Ronfard, Deborah T. Bartz, Liao Cheng, Xinkui Chen and Paul L. Harris 5. The Developmental Origins of Dehumanization Niamh McLoughlin and Harriet Over 6. Trends and Divergences in Childhood Income Dynamics, 1970-2010 Heather D. Hill 7. Social Influence on Positive Youth Development: A Developmental Neuroscience Perspective Eva H. Telzer, Jorien van Hoorn, Christina R. Rogers and Kathy T. Do 8. Kin Networks and Mobility in the Transition to Adulthood Janel E. Benson and Anastassia Bougakova
Janette B. Benson is an Associate Professor in the Psychology Department at the University of Denver. She served for five years as the Director of the University-wide Office of Academic Assessment and co-chaired the successful University reaccreditation. Most recently she served as the Associate Dean of the Morgridge College of Education (2014-2017). Dr. Benson's expertise is in cognitive and sensorimotor development in infancy and early childhood, and her research has been funded by the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, The MacArthur Foundation and the March of Dimes. Dr. Benson has published several articles, book chapters and has edited or co-edited several books, including The Encyclopedia of Infancy and Early Childhood Development. She has been the recipient of several awards and honors, including the University of Denver Scholar - Teacher of the Year (1993), the 2000 CASE Colorado Professor of the Year, a Carnegie Scholar, a Fellow of the Association for Psychological Science, member of the Board of Directors of Shortridge Academy, and the serial editor of Advances in Child Development and Behavior.