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1.
Clin Psychol Psychother ; 29(3): 1113-1124, 2022 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34862687

RESUMO

Increases in positive emotions may not only be indicators of progress in therapy but also precursors to that improvement. Conducted in a psychology training clinic, this naturalistic, repeated-measures study tracked changes over the course of therapy in 34 clients' emotional experience and two of the primary targets of clinical interventions, symptom distress and relationship functioning. During treatment, positive emotions increased, negative emotions decreased, and improvements were seen in therapeutic outcomes. Positive and negative emotions were correlated, as were changes in positive and negative emotions. However, despite this association, increases in positive emotions were a significant predictor of concurrent improvements in symptom distress and relationship functioning, even when decreases in negative emotions were included in the same model. Additionally, positive emotions not only predicted change in these treatment outcomes over the same time period, but they also predicted future change. This study contributes to research on the critical role positive emotions play in psychotherapy and may encourage the development of interventions focusing on increasing positive emotions. These findings highlight the distinct functioning of positive emotions separate from negative and the value of attending to positive emotions during therapy.


Assuntos
Emoções , Psicoterapia , Previsões , Humanos , Resultado do Tratamento
2.
Dev Psychopathol ; 30(1): 235-253, 2018 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28555535

RESUMO

High conflict and low warmth in families may contribute to immune cells developing a tendency to respond to threats with exaggerated inflammation that is insensitive to inhibitory signaling. We tested associations between family environments and expression of genes bearing response elements for transcription factors that regulate inflammation: nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB) and glucocorticoid receptor. The overall sample (47 families) completed interviews, questionnaires, and 8-week daily diary assessments of conflict and warmth, which were used to create composite family conflict and warmth scores. The diaries assessed upper respiratory infection (URI) symptoms, and URI episodes were clinically verified. Leukocyte RNA was extracted from whole blood samples provided by a subsample of 42 children (8-13 years of age) and 73 parents. In children, higher conflict and lower warmth were related to greater expression of genes bearing response elements for the proinflammatory transcription factor NF-κB, and more severe URI symptoms. In parents, higher conflict and lower warmth were also related to greater NF-κB-associated gene expression. Monocytes and dendritic cells were implicated as primary cellular sources of differential gene expression in the sample. Consistent with existing conceptual frameworks, stressful family environments were related to a proinflammatory phenotype at the level of the circulating leukocyte transcriptome.


Assuntos
Conflito Familiar , Inflamação/metabolismo , Leucócitos/metabolismo , Transcriptoma , Adolescente , Criança , Feminino , Regulação da Expressão Gênica , Humanos , Inflamação/psicologia , Relações Interpessoais , Masculino , NF-kappa B/metabolismo , Pais , Fenótipo , Receptores de Glucocorticoides/metabolismo , Transdução de Sinais/fisiologia
3.
J Fam Psychol ; 37(6): 899-908, 2023 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37471028

RESUMO

Compassion is an inherently interpersonal emotion that motivates caretaking behavior. Yet, couples' expressions of compassion have been largely overlooked by researchers. We capitalized on a unique archive of naturalistic recordings to assess the frequency with which married couples (N = 30) verbally expressed compassion to one another in daily life and tested associations with partners' ratings of marital quality, depression, and neuroticism. A keyword search of hundreds of hours of recordings flagged potential expressions; human coders examined the interpersonal context in each instance to identify the cases that were actual expressions of compassion. The data showed that verbal expressions of compassion were common: Couples were observed offering compassion on average twice per hour. Actor-partner interdependence models (APIMs) tested how the rate at which compassion was expressed to a spouse was linked to the partners' reports of marital quality, depression, and neuroticism. There was evidence for a hypothesized partner effect: husbands offered more compassion to wives who reported more depressive symptoms. An unexpected pattern emerged indicating that husbands' personal distress was associated with more frequent compassion expressions. In particular, husbands who perceived their marriages as lower quality and husbands who reported more neuroticism offered more compassion. Our findings highlight the distinction between the internal emotional experience versus verbal expressions of compassion and suggest that some partner compassion behaviors may reflect hypervigilance and compulsive caretaking triggered by distress. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).


Assuntos
Mel , Casamento , Humanos , Casamento/psicologia , Relações Interpessoais , Saúde Mental , Empatia , Satisfação Pessoal , Cônjuges/psicologia
4.
Dev Psychol ; 58(6): 1051-1065, 2022 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35446071

RESUMO

Children learn what words mean from hearing words used across a variety of contexts. Understanding how different contextual distributions relate to the words young children say is critical because context robustly affects basic learning and memory processes. This study examined children's everyday experiences using naturalistic video recordings to examine two contextual factors-where words are spoken and who speaks the words-through analyzing the nouns in language input and children's own language productions. The families in the study (n = 8) were two-parent, dual-income, middle-class families with a child between 1 year, 3 months to 4 years, 4 months (age M = 3 years, 5 months) and at least one additional sibling. The families were filmed as they interacted in their homes and communities over 2 weekdays and 2 weekend days. From these videos, we identified when the focal child was exposed to language input and randomly selected 9 hr of contiguous speech segments per family to obtain 6,129 noun types and 30,257 noun tokens in language input and 1,072 noun types and 5,360 noun tokens in children's speech. We examined whether the words that children heard in more variable spatial and speaker contexts were produced with greater frequency by children. The results suggest that both the number of places and the number of speakers that characterized a child's exposure to a noun were positively associated with the child's production of that noun, independent of how frequently the word was spoken. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).


Assuntos
Desenvolvimento da Linguagem , Idioma , Criança , Linguagem Infantil , Pré-Escolar , Humanos , Pais , Fala
5.
Ann Behav Med ; 42(3): 285-93, 2011 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21822751

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Characteristics of family life are linked both cross-sectionally and prospectively to adult mental and physical health. PURPOSE: This paper discusses social and biological processes that may explain how families influence the health of their members. METHODS: We review naturalistic studies of short-term biopsychosocial processes as they unfold within the family. RESULTS: Day-to-day fluctuations in stressors, demands, and social and emotional experiences in the family are reflected in short-term changes in adult members' affect and in the activity of biological stress-response systems, particularly the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. CONCLUSIONS: To learn how family environments are linked to health, researchers should study the interlacing of different aspects of the everyday lives of family members, including their physiology, emotions, behavior, activities, and experiences.


Assuntos
Saúde da Família , Família/psicologia , Nível de Saúde , Saúde Mental , Adulto , Afeto , Feminino , Humanos , Sistema Hipotálamo-Hipofisário/fisiopatologia , Masculino , Sistema Hipófise-Suprarrenal/fisiopatologia , Meio Social , Estresse Fisiológico , Estresse Psicológico
6.
Dev Psychopathol ; 23(3): 921-38, 2011 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21756442

RESUMO

The concepts of allostatic load and allostatic processes can help psychologists understand how health trajectories are influenced by stressful childhood experiences in the family. This paper describes psychological pathways and two key allostatic mediators, the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and the immune system, through which stressful early rearing conditions may influence adult mental and physical health. The action of meshed gears is introduced as a metaphor to illustrate how responses occurring within a brief time frame, for example, immediate reactions to stressors, can influence developmental and health processes unfolding over much longer spans of time. We identify early-developing psychological and biological response patterns that could link chronic stressors in childhood to later health outcomes. Some of these "precursor outcomes" (e.g., heightened vigilance and preparedness for threats; enhanced inflammatory and humoral responses to infectious microorganisms) appear to be aimed at protection from immediate dangers; they may reflect "adaptive trade-offs" that balance short-term survival advantages under harsh rearing conditions against disadvantages manifested later in development. Our analysis also suggests mechanisms that underlie resilience in risky family environments.


Assuntos
Alostase/fisiologia , Relações Familiares , Família/psicologia , Estresse Psicológico/fisiopatologia , Adaptação Fisiológica , Humanos , Sistema Hipotálamo-Hipofisário/fisiopatologia , Sistema Hipófise-Suprarrenal/fisiopatologia , Estresse Psicológico/psicologia
7.
J Fam Psychol ; 35(2): 172-181, 2021 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33871278

RESUMO

With technological advances rapidly expanding our ability to collect continuous streams of passive recordings, new techniques for processing and analyzing data of this type are needed. This article presents a feasible, reliable, and valid language-based methodology for scanning large quantities of naturalistic recordings to study specific positive emotions in families. Detailing a keyword approach to identifying and coding verbal expressions of compassion, gratitude, pride, and amusement in video transcripts, this study demonstrates one way of locating phenomena, such as emotion, that arise across many different situations in family life. Transcripts of over 350 hr of video recordings obtained from 32 families interacting in their homes and communities were coded to describe the rates per hour at which mothers, fathers, and school-age children verbally expressed 4 positive emotions. Parents expressed compassion, gratitude, and pride more often than children did, but they expressed amusement at similar rates. Gender comparisons revealed that mothers expressed compassion and gratitude more frequently than fathers, and girls expressed these emotions more often than boys. The specific emotion approach allowed us to probe the association between parental and child-expressed positivity: Mothers' expressions of compassion were the most powerful predictor, explaining over half the variance in children's expressions of positive emotion. This study describes a promising approach to analyzing large volumes of passive data; the results show how families differ with respect to the landscape of 4 specific positive emotions and suggest how and why these emotions should be differentiated in studies of daily family life. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).


Assuntos
Comportamento do Adolescente , Comportamento Infantil , Emoções , Família , Pai , Mães , Comportamento Verbal , Adolescente , Adulto , Criança , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Fatores Sexuais
8.
Psychosom Med ; 72(9): 887-96, 2010 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20841560

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether worries about work are linked to people's own cortisol levels and their spouses' cortisol levels in everyday life and whether marital factors may moderate these links. Although research has shown that satisfying marriages can buffer the physiological effects of everyday stress, the specific mechanisms through which marriage influences the processing and transmission of stress have not yet been identified. METHODS: Thirty-seven healthy married couples completed baseline measures and then provided saliva samples and indicated their worries about work for six times a day from a Saturday morning through a Monday evening. RESULTS: Wives' cortisol levels were associated positively with their own work worries (p = .008) and with their husbands' work worries (p = .006). Husbands' cortisol levels were associated positively only with their own work worries (p = .015). Wives low in both marital satisfaction and disclosure showed a stronger association between work worries and cortisol compared with wives reporting either high marital satisfaction and/or high marital disclosure. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that momentary feelings of stress affect not only one's own cortisol levels but affect close others' cortisol levels as well. Furthermore, they suggest that, for women, the stress-buffering effects of a happy marriage may be partially explained by the extent to which they disclose their thoughts and feelings with their spouses.


Assuntos
Ritmo Circadiano/fisiologia , Hidrocortisona/análise , Acontecimentos que Mudam a Vida , Casamento/psicologia , Saliva/química , Autorrevelação , Cônjuges/estatística & dados numéricos , Trabalho/psicologia , Adulto , Criança , Emoções/fisiologia , Feminino , Humanos , Hidrocortisona/metabolismo , Sistema Hipotálamo-Hipofisário/fisiologia , Relações Interpessoais , Masculino , Pais/psicologia , Satisfação Pessoal , Sistema Hipófise-Suprarrenal/fisiologia , Saliva/metabolismo , Cônjuges/psicologia , Inquéritos e Questionários
9.
J Abnorm Child Psychol ; 48(8): 1063-1075, 2020 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32328865

RESUMO

The mental health toll of common school problems that many children encounter every day is not well understood. This study examined individual differences in mood reactivity to naturally occurring school problems using daily diaries, and assessed their prospective associations with youth mental health, three years later. At baseline, 47 children ages 8 to 13 years described common problems at school and mood on a daily basis, for 8 weeks. Thirty-three youth returned for follow-up three years later at ages 11 to 17 years. Children and parents also completed one-time questionnaires about youth mental health at baseline and follow-up. There were individual differences in the within-person associations between school problems and same-day and next-day mood. A greater tendency to react to school problems with more negative mood or less positive mood on the same day predicted more parent-rated internalizing and externalizing problems and child ratings of depression symptoms three years later, relative to baseline levels of symptoms. Daily diaries can help to identify specific targets of psychosocial interventions in real world settings.


Assuntos
Afeto , Comportamento Problema/psicologia , Estresse Psicológico/psicologia , Adolescente , Criança , Depressão/epidemiologia , Diários como Assunto , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pais , Estudos Prospectivos , Instituições Acadêmicas , Estudantes/psicologia , Inquéritos e Questionários , Estados Unidos/epidemiologia
10.
Aging (Albany NY) ; 12(16): 16476-16490, 2020 07 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32712602

RESUMO

Chronic stress can accelerate biological aging, offering one mechanism through which stress may increase age-related disease risk. Chronic activation of the sympathoadrenal system increases cellular energy production, resulting in cell stress that can initiate cellular senescence, a permanent state of cell growth arrest. Our previous research linked psychosocial stress with increased expression of senescence marker p16INK4a; however, less is known about the role of protective psychosocial factors in biological aging. We examined relationship closeness (perceived interconnectedness with one's spouse) as a protective buffer of the effects of stress on expression of the p16INK4a-encoding gene (CDKN2A) and transcription control pathways activated under cell stress. Seventy parents (Mage=43.2) completed interview-based and questionnaire measures of psychosocial stress and relationship closeness. Blood samples assessed CDKN2A expression and inferred activity of a priori-selected transcription factors Nrf2 and heat shock factors (HSFs) via genome-wide transcriptome profiling. Random intercept models adjusting for age, sex, and ethnicity/race revealed that perceived stress was associated with elevated CDKN2A expression for parents with low but not high closeness. Secondary bioinformatics analyses linked the interaction of perceived stress and relationship closeness to Nrf2 and HSF-1 activity. Findings identify relationship closeness as a protective factor that may buffer the impact of stress on cellular stress and senescence pathways.


Assuntos
Envelhecimento/sangue , Inibidor p16 de Quinase Dependente de Ciclina/sangue , Relações Interpessoais , Cônjuges/psicologia , Estresse Psicológico/sangue , Transcriptoma , Adulto , Fatores Etários , Envelhecimento/genética , Envelhecimento/metabolismo , Envelhecimento/psicologia , Biomarcadores/sangue , Feminino , Perfilação da Expressão Gênica , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Fatores de Proteção , Fatores de Risco , Estresse Psicológico/genética , Estresse Psicológico/metabolismo , Estresse Psicológico/psicologia
11.
J Adolesc ; 32(2): 415-23, 2009 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18706686

RESUMO

Parents of 50 4th grade girls reported on their marital relationships and then, two years later, rated their daughters' pubertal development. Fathers' ratings of marital dissatisfaction, mothers' ratings of less emotional support from husbands, and both parents' ratings of aversive marital conflict were correlated with more advanced pubertal development in daughters. Fathers' withdrawal behavior during marital conflict emerged as the strongest predictor. These results are consistent with evolutionary theories of pubertal development and suggest that parents' impressions of the marital relationship may be linked with girls' pubertal development, even in a middle-class sample with both parents present in the household. They also suggest several heretofore underexplored foci for researchers in this area, such as parents' behaviors during marital conflict and fathers' experiences of the marital relationship.


Assuntos
Pai/psicologia , Casamento/psicologia , Mães/psicologia , Núcleo Familiar/psicologia , Puberdade/fisiologia , Adolescente , Adulto , Criança , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Puberdade/psicologia
12.
Psychoneuroendocrinology ; 100: 67-74, 2019 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30292961

RESUMO

Effective regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPA-axis) has been linked to numerous health outcomes. Within-person variation in diurnal measures of HPA-axis regulation assessed over days, months, and years can range between 50-73% of total variation. In this study of 59 youth (ages 8-13), we quantified the stability of the cortisol awakening response (CAR), the diurnal slope, and tonic cortisol concentrations at waking and bedtime across 8 days (2 sets of 4 consecutive days separated by 3 weeks), 3 weeks, and 3 years. We then compared the stability of these indices across three key developmental factors: age, pubertal status, and sex. Youth provided 4 saliva samples per day (waking, 30 min post-waking, before dinner, and before bedtime) for 4 consecutive days during the 3rd week of an ongoing 8-week daily diary study. Youth repeated this same sampling procedure 3 weeks and 3 years later. Using multi-level modeling, we computed the amount of variance in diurnal HPA-axis regulation that was accounted for by nesting an individual's diurnal cortisol indices within days, weeks, or years. Across days, diurnal slope was the most stable index, whereas waking cortisol and CAR were the least stable. All indices except bedtime cortisol were similarly stable when measured across weeks, and all indices were uniformly stable when measured across 3 years. Boys, younger participants, and youth earlier in their pubertal development at study enrollment exhibited greater HPA-axis stability overall compared with females and older, more physically mature participants. We conclude that important within- and between-subjects questions can be answered about health and human development by studying HPA-axis regulation, and selection of the index of interest should be determined in part by its psychometric characteristics. To this end, we propose a decision tree to guide study design for research in pediatric samples by longitudinal timeframe and sample characteristics.


Assuntos
Desenvolvimento do Adolescente/fisiologia , Hidrocortisona/metabolismo , Puberdade/fisiologia , Adolescente , Fatores Etários , Criança , Desenvolvimento Infantil/fisiologia , Ritmo Circadiano/fisiologia , Feminino , Humanos , Sistema Hipotálamo-Hipofisário/fisiologia , Estudos Longitudinais , Masculino , Sistema Hipófise-Suprarrenal/fisiologia , Saliva/metabolismo , Caracteres Sexuais , Fatores de Tempo
13.
Psychoneuroendocrinology ; 102: 139-148, 2019 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30557761

RESUMO

Previous research has linked exposure to adverse social conditions with DNA damage and accelerated telomere shortening, raising the possibility that chronic stress may impact biological aging pathways, ultimately increasing risk for age-related diseases. Less clear, however, is whether these stress-related effects extend to additional hallmarks of biological aging, including cellular senescence, a stable state of cell cycle arrest. The present study aimed to investigate associations between psychosocial stress and two markers of cellular aging-leukocyte telomere length (LTL) and cellular senescence signal p16INK4a. Seventy-three adults (Mage = 43.0, SD = 7.2; 55% female) with children between 8-13 years of age completed interview-based and questionnaire measures of their exposures to and experiences of stress, as well as daily reports of stress appraisals over an 8-week diary period. Blood samples were used to assess markers of cellular aging: LTL and gene expression of senescent cell signal p16INK4a (CDKN2A). Random effects models covarying for age, sex, ethnicity/race, and BMI revealed that participants with greater chronic stress exposure over the previous 6 months (b = 0.011, p = .04), perceived stress (b = 0.020, p < .001), and accumulated daily stress appraisals over the 8-week period (b = 0.013, p = .02) showed increased p16INK4a. No significant associations with LTL were found. These findings extend previous work on the impact of stress on biological aging by linking chronic stress exposure and daily stressful experiences to an accumulation of senescent cells. Findings also support the hypothesis that chronic stress is associated with accelerated aging by inducing cellular senescence, a common correlate of age-related diseases.


Assuntos
Envelhecimento/metabolismo , Envelhecimento/psicologia , Senescência Celular/genética , Adulto , Biomarcadores , Inibidor p16 de Quinase Dependente de Ciclina , Feminino , Genes p16/fisiologia , Humanos , Leucócitos/metabolismo , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Transdução de Sinais , Estresse Psicológico , Telômero/metabolismo , Encurtamento do Telômero/genética
14.
Health Psychol ; 27(1): 15-25, 2008 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18230009

RESUMO

DESIGN: Multilevel modeling was used to model relationships between salivary cortisol, daily diary ratings of work experiences, and Marital Adjustment Test scores (Locke & Wallace, 1959), in a sample of 60 adults who sampled saliva 4 times per day over 3 days. RESULTS: Among women but not men, marital satisfaction was significantly associated with a stronger basal cortisol cycle, with higher morning values and a steeper decline across the day. For women but not men, marital satisfaction moderated the within-subjects association between afternoon and evening cortisol level, such that marital quality appeared to bolster women's physiological recovery from work. For both men and women, evening cortisol was lower than usual on higher-workload days, and marital satisfaction augmented this association among women. Men showed higher evening cortisol after more distressing social experiences at work, an association that was strongest among men with higher marital satisfaction. CONCLUSION: This work has implications for the study of physiological recovery from work, and also suggests a pathway by which marital satisfaction influences allostatic load and physical health.


Assuntos
Hidrocortisona/análise , Casamento , Satisfação Pessoal , Saliva , Adulto , Alostase , Emprego/psicologia , Feminino , Humanos , Sistema Hipotálamo-Hipofisário/metabolismo , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Sistema Hipófise-Suprarrenal/metabolismo , Relaxamento/psicologia , Sudoeste dos Estados Unidos , Inquéritos e Questionários
15.
J Abnorm Child Psychol ; 46(3): 423-435, 2018 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28577264

RESUMO

Examining emotion reactivity and recovery following minor problems in daily life can deepen our understanding of how stress affects child mental health. This study assessed children's immediate and delayed emotion responses to daily problems at school, and examined their correlations with psychological symptoms. On 5 consecutive weekdays, 83 fifth graders (M = 10.91 years, SD = 0.53, 51% female) completed brief diary forms 5 times per day, providing repeated ratings of school problems and emotions. They also completed a one-time questionnaire about symptoms of depression, and parents and teachers rated child internalizing and externalizing problems. Using multilevel modeling techniques, we assessed within-person daily associations between school problems and negative and positive emotion at school and again at bedtime. On days when children experienced more school problems, they reported more negative emotion and less positive emotion at school, and at bedtime. There were reliable individual differences in emotion reactivity and recovery. Individual-level indices of emotion responses derived from multilevel models were correlated with child psychological symptoms. Children who showed more negative emotion reactivity reported more depressive symptoms. Multiple informants described fewer internalizing problems among children who showed better recovery by bedtime, even after controlling for children's average levels of exposure to school problems. Diary methods can extend our understanding of the links between daily stress, emotions and child mental health. Recovery following stressful events may be an important target of research and intervention for child internalizing problems.


Assuntos
Sintomas Comportamentais/psicologia , Comportamento Infantil/psicologia , Emoções/fisiologia , Instituições Acadêmicas , Criança , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Comportamento Problema/psicologia
16.
J Fam Psychol ; 32(6): 773-782, 2018 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29927288

RESUMO

Interparental conflict is a common source of psychosocial stress in the lives of children. The purpose of this study was to examine the association between recent interparental conflict and one component of the physiological stress response system, the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA)-axis. Parents of 42 children (ages 8-13 years) completed daily diaries of interparental conflict for 8 weeks. At the end of the 8 weeks, youth participated in the Trier Social Stress Test for Children (TSST-C) while providing 2 pre- and 4 poststress salivary cortisol samples. Youth whose fathers reported a pattern of increasing interparental conflict over the past 8 weeks demonstrated an exaggerated HPA-axis response to acute stress. Mother-reported interparental conflict was not associated with children's HPA-axis responses without accounting for fathers' reports. When accounting for fathers' reports, the offspring of mothers reporting higher average daily interparental conflict demonstrated an attenuated HPA-axis response to the stressor. By estimating both average exposure and recent patterns of change in exposure to conflict, we address the circumstances that may prompt attenuation versus sensitization of the HPA-axis in the context of interparental conflict. We conclude that the HPA-axis is sensitive to proximal increases in interparental conflict which may be one pathway through which stress affects health across development, and that incorporating father's reports is important to understanding the role of the family environment in stress responses. This study further demonstrates the value of using intensive repeated measures and multiple reporters to characterize children's psychosocial environment. (PsycINFO Database Record


Assuntos
Conflito Familiar/psicologia , Hidrocortisona/metabolismo , Sistema Hipotálamo-Hipofisário/metabolismo , Sistema Hipófise-Suprarrenal/metabolismo , Estresse Psicológico/metabolismo , Estresse Psicológico/fisiopatologia , Adolescente , Adulto , Criança , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino
17.
Soc Dev ; 26(4): 813-830, 2017 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29307958

RESUMO

This study examined how academic and peer problems at school are linked to family interactions at home on the same day, using eight consecutive weeks of daily diary data collected from early adolescents (60% female; M age = 11.28, SD = 1.50), mothers and fathers in 47 families. On days when children reported more academic problems at school, they, but not their parents, reported less warmth and more conflict with mothers, and more conflict and less time spent around fathers. These effects were partially explained by same-day child reports of higher negative mood. Peer problems were less consistently associated with parent-child interactions over and above the effects of academic problems that day. A one-time measure of parent-child relationship quality moderated several daily associations, such that the same-day link between school problems and child-report of family interactions was stronger among children who were closer to their parents.

18.
Psychoneuroendocrinology ; 83: 150-158, 2017 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28623764

RESUMO

This study examined the within-and between-person associations between daily negative events - peer problems, academic problems and interparental conflict - and diurnal cortisol in school-age children. Salivary cortisol levels were assessed four times per day (at wakeup, 30min later, just before dinner and at bedtime) on eight days in 47 youths ages 8-13 years old (60% female; M age=11.28, SD=1.50). The relative contributions of within- and between-person variances in each stressor were estimated in models predicting same-day diurnal cortisol slope, same-day bedtime cortisol, and next morning wakeup cortisol. Children who reported more peer problems on average showed flatter slopes of cortisol decline from wakeup to bedtime. However, children secreted more cortisol at wakeup following days when they had reported more peer or academic problems than usual. Interparental conflict was not significantly associated with diurnal cortisol. Findings from this study extend our understanding of short-term cortisol responses to naturally occurring problems in daily life, and help to differentiate these daily processes from the cumulative effects of chronic stress.


Assuntos
Atividades Cotidianas/psicologia , Ritmo Circadiano/fisiologia , Hidrocortisona/metabolismo , Estresse Psicológico/metabolismo , Adolescente , Criança , Conflito Familiar/psicologia , Feminino , Humanos , Hidrocortisona/análise , Sistema Hipotálamo-Hipofisário/metabolismo , Relações Interpessoais , Masculino , Sistema Hipófise-Suprarrenal/metabolismo , Saliva , Instituições Acadêmicas , Estresse Psicológico/fisiopatologia
19.
J Fam Psychol ; 30(4): 492-502, 2016 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27010600

RESUMO

We examined sex differences in explicitly supportive behavior exchanges between husbands and wives using naturalistic video-recordings of everyday couple interactions inside the home. Thirty dual-earner, middle class, heterosexual couples with school-age children were recorded in their homes over 4 days. Specific instances of face-to-face explicit couple support in the video-recordings were identified, and the support role assumed by each partner (recipient vs. provider), the method of support initiation (solicitations vs. offers), and the type of support (instrumental vs. emotional) in each interaction were coded. Paired samples t tests examined sex differences in husbands' and wives' supportive behavior, and bivariate correlations tested the associations among spouses' support initiation behaviors. Findings counter prior research that has largely found a "support gap" favoring husbands as support recipients. Instead, results indicate that wives received significantly more support of an instrumental nature from husbands (than husbands did from wives), a finding driven by wives' active support-soliciting behavior. Among husbands, a tendency to be the solicitor of support was positively correlated with a tendency to offer support. Within couples, rates of offers of support by 1 spouse were correlated with offers by the partner. Naturalistic observations highlight processes that may not be detected by self-reports or laboratory data, in an ecologically valid context in which social behavior reflects the natural rhythms and pulls of everyday life. (PsycINFO Database Record


Assuntos
Relações Interpessoais , Casamento/psicologia , Cônjuges/psicologia , Adulto , Criança , Emoções , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Fatores Sexuais , Gravação de Videoteipe
20.
Dev Psychol ; 52(1): 88-101, 2016 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26524382

RESUMO

Research on family socialization of positive emotion has primarily focused on the infant and toddler stages of development, and relied on observations of parent-child interactions in highly structured laboratory environments. Little is known about how children's spontaneous expressions of positive emotion are maintained in the uncontrolled settings of daily life, particularly within the family and during the school-age years. This naturalistic observational study examines 3 family behaviors-mutual display of positive emotion, touch, and joint leisure-that surround 8- to 12-year-old children's spontaneous expressions of positive emotion, and tests whether these behaviors help to sustain children's expressions. Recordings taken of 31 families in their homes and communities over 2 days were screened for moments when children spontaneously expressed positive emotion in the presence of at least 1 parent. Children were more likely to sustain their expressions of positive emotion when mothers, fathers, or siblings showed positive emotion, touched, or participated in a leisure activity. There were few differences in the ways that mothers and fathers socialized their sons' and daughters' positive emotion expressions. This study takes a unique, ecologically valid approach to assess how family members connect to children's expressions of positive emotion in middle childhood. Future observational studies should continue to explore mechanisms of family socialization of positive emotion, in laboratory and naturalistic settings. (PsycINFO Database Record


Assuntos
Relações Pais-Filho , Jogos e Brinquedos , Irmãos/psicologia , Sorriso/psicologia , Tato , Adulto , Criança , Comportamento Infantil/psicologia , Desenvolvimento Infantil , Relações Familiares , Feminino , Felicidade , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Socialização
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