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1.
Emotion ; 22(6): 1294-1306, 2022 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36006705

ABSTRACT

Applying theories of emotion to understanding the regulation of aversive parenting, we used microanalytic observational methods to test whether transient changes in a mother's negative emotional reactivity predict changes over time in key parameters of her moment-to-moment aversive behavior: its intensity, variability, persistence, and connection to difficult child inputs. At multiple times over 2 years, 319 divorcing mothers and their 5- to 12-year-old children were observed as they discussed mutual disagreements. Sequences of talk-turns were recorded and coded for affect and content. Relative to days when a mother was low in negative emotional reactivity, on days when she was high she displayed more intensely aversive behavior, more variable aversiveness, more transitions from average to high or low aversiveness, tendencies to remain aversive longer following spikes in her aversiveness, and difficulty maintaining low aversiveness following drops in her aversiveness. As her negative emotional reactivity increased, she went from being relatively unaffected by children's difficult behavior to being aversively reactive; from ceasing aversive sequences increasingly quickly to ceasing aversive sequences increasingly slowly; from deviating more from her nonreactive low-aversive parenting to deviating less from her reactive high-aversive parenting. Independent of stable individual differences in mothers and children, transient variations in mothers' emotional reactivity may correspond to key moment-to-moment parameters of aversive parenting, even when interactions are relatively noncontentious. The data provide a viable account of how initially transient, context-specific reactivity could initiate moment-to-moment changes in aversive patterns that in some families influence problematic family trajectories over time. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).


Subject(s)
Mothers , Parenting , Child , Child Behavior/psychology , Child, Preschool , Emotions/physiology , Female , Humans , Mother-Child Relations/psychology , Mothers/psychology , Parenting/psychology , Stress, Psychological/psychology
2.
Dev Psychol ; 54(8): 1528-1541, 2018 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29927264

ABSTRACT

Based on data from 710 2-parent families enrolled in the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development, this article examined dyadic and family-level interdependence among indicators of family members' competence over time. A cross-lagged model that included children and both parents was used to simultaneously test relations among observed maternal sensitivity, observed paternal sensitivity, and children's externalizing behavior from 54 months to fifth grade. Testing 3 principal hypotheses, the study supported basic assumptions of a transactional family systems approach: (a) mother-child and father-child relations were independent predictors of change in children's and parents' behavior across middle childhood; (b) at all assessments, each parents' sensitive parenting predicted subsequent change in the other's sensitive parenting; and (c) both dyadic indirect effects between two family members and family-level indirect effects among all 3 family members were found. When predicting each members' behavior over time, a model that included both dyadic and family-level relations was superior to models that included only dyadic relations. Tests of 2 exploratory hypotheses suggested that (a) fathers' parenting predicted changes in mothers' parenting as equally as mothers' parenting predicted changes in fathers' parenting; and (b) mothers' parenting tended to be more influential early in development, and fathers' parenting was more influential later in development. The results suggest that individual development within families reflects complex dyadic and family-level interdependence among the behaviors of mothers, fathers, and their children over time. (PsycINFO Database Record


Subject(s)
Child Behavior/psychology , Father-Child Relations , Mother-Child Relations/psychology , Parenting/psychology , Problem Behavior/psychology , Child , Child, Preschool , Fathers/psychology , Female , Humans , Likelihood Functions , Male , Models, Psychological , Mothers/psychology , Spouses/psychology , Time Factors
3.
Dev Psychol ; 53(9): 1666-1679, 2017 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28682098

ABSTRACT

On the basis of longitudinal data across 9 years, this study examined the contribution of sustained attention and executive function to the poor cognitive and socioemotional adjustment of school-age children whose mothers had depressive symptoms during the child's infancy. Mothers (N = 1,364) reported depressive symptoms across their child's infancy and early childhood. Maternal sensitivity was observed during laboratory interactions at 36 months. At school entry children's sustained attention and executive function were measured with computer-generated tasks. In third grade, cognitive and socioemotional adjustment was assessed with standardized tests and the reports of fathers and teachers. Using structural equation modeling, findings showed that (a) exposure to mothers' depressive symptoms during the child's infancy, independent of later exposure, uniquely predicted children's poor sustained attention and executive function at school entry; (b) deficits in children's sustained attention and executive function occurred because of depressed mothers' tendencies to display insensitive parenting behavior; and (c) these deficits explained in part relations between exposure to mothers' depressive symptoms in infancy and children's poor cognitive and socioemotional adjustment in third grade. Findings highlight the potential importance of children's exposure to mothers' depressive symptoms specifically during the child's infancy for disrupting the development of fundamental cognitive processes that may underlie the adjustment problems children of depressed mothers display in middle childhood. (PsycINFO Database Record


Subject(s)
Attention/physiology , Depression/psychology , Executive Function/physiology , Mother-Child Relations , Mothers/psychology , Social Behavior , Adult , Age Factors , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Models, Psychological , Neuropsychological Tests , Parenting/psychology , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales
4.
J Fam Psychol ; 31(2): 224-233, 2017 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27748616

ABSTRACT

Research is unclear about when expressing negative emotions to children performs valuable socialization and regulatory functions and when, instead, it undermines children's adjustment. In this study, we isolated 1 kind of negative expression to test the aversion sensitivity hypothesis: that rapid increases in mothers' negativity as a function of increases in the aversiveness of children's behavior are uniquely problematic for children. During multiple assessments of a divorcing sample over 2 years (N = 284), 12-min interactions between mothers and their 4- to 11-year-old children were recorded. Forty-seven observed child behaviors were ranked from low to high aversive. Within-dyad changes demonstrated that mothers' general negativity-their tendency to express negative emotion at high rates-was unrelated to children's adjustment. In contrast, mothers' aversion-focused negativity-their tendency to increase negative emotional expression rapidly as the aversiveness of children's behavior increased-predicted children's poor social competence, poor emotion regulation, and externalizing behavior problems at the next assessment. The findings suggest that negative expression that reflects mothers' affective sensitivity to aversive child behavior may promote interaction patterns and adaptations in children that are particularly likely to place children at risk for adjustment problems. (PsycINFO Database Record


Subject(s)
Adjustment Disorders/psychology , Child Behavior/psychology , Emotions/physiology , Mothers/psychology , Stress, Psychological/psychology , Adult , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Middle Aged , Young Adult
5.
J Fam Psychol ; 31(2): 214-223, 2017 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27584934

ABSTRACT

This study examined processes that might account for why negatively emotional children are at high risk for externalizing behavior problems when raised by mothers with depressive symptoms. Because negative emotionality regulates adaptation to stress, we predicted that it would undermine children's adjustment to mothers' depressive symptoms by increasing child emotions likely to elicit reciprocal negativity from depressed mothers, bias negatively children's attributions about others, and activate difficult-to-control oppositional responses. In a large sample (N = 1,082) evaluated from 6 months to second grade, results showed that, when mothers had depressive symptoms early in the child's development, children who were high in negative emotionality-but not those who were low-displayed increased risk for externalizing problems in second grade. This risk reflected tendencies for negatively emotional children, when raised by mothers with depressive symptoms, to develop hostile attributions about others and poor self-regulation of the negativity these attributions promote. The findings suggest that, when mothers with depressive symptoms raise negatively emotional children, children's risk for externalizing behavior problems may reflect tendencies for high negative emotion in children and reciprocal negativity in the dyad to undermine the development of attributional and self-regulatory processes. (PsycINFO Database Record


Subject(s)
Depression/psychology , Emotions , Hostility , Mothers/psychology , Problem Behavior/psychology , Adult , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Infant , Male
6.
Dev Psychol ; 52(8): 1291-8, 2016 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27389834

ABSTRACT

Using data from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development (N = 1,364), the present study supports an agentic perspective; it demonstrates that mothers' depressive symptoms in infancy predict children's poor first-grade cognitive functioning because depressive symptoms predict children's low social and cognitive agency-low motivation to initiate social interaction and actively engage in activities. When mothers' depressive symptoms were high in infancy, children displayed poor first-grade cognitive functioning due to (a) tendencies to become socially withdrawn by 36 months and low in mastery motivation by 54 months and (b) tendencies for children's low agency to predict declines in mothers' sensitivity and cognitive stimulation. Findings suggest that mothers' depressive symptoms undermine cognitive development through bidirectional processes centered on children's low motivation to engage in social interaction and initiate and persist at everyday tasks. (PsycINFO Database Record


Subject(s)
Cognition , Depression , Mothers/psychology , Social Behavior , Adult , Child , Child, Preschool , Factor Analysis, Statistical , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Models, Statistical , Mother-Child Relations , Motivation , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales
7.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry ; 56(2): 183-92, 2015 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25040067

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: This study examined whether social-cognitive processes in children mediate relations between mothers' depressive symptoms across the first 3 years and children's first-grade social competence. Three maladaptive cognitions were examined: self-perceived social inadequacy, hostile attribution, and aggressive response generation. METHOD: One thousand three hundred and sixty-four mothers reported depressive symptoms across early development, first-grade children reported target social cognitions, and children's first-grade social competence was observed and reported by multiple informants. RESULTS: Findings demonstrated that (a) mothers' average depressive symptoms from 6 to 36 months predicted children's maladaptive social cognition in first grade, (b) low mother-child responsiveness mediated this relation, and (c) maladaptive social cognition mediated relations between mothers' early depressive symptoms and low first-grade social competence independent of later depressive symptoms. CONCLUSION: When mothers' depressive symptoms occur early in development, they may set in motion low-responsive dyadic patterns that promote children's maladaptive social cognition and, as a result, low social competence.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Psychological/physiology , Child Development/physiology , Depression/psychology , Social Perception , Social Skills , Adult , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Mothers
8.
Psychol Sci ; 25(7): 1353-61, 2014 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24796661

ABSTRACT

This study examined whether, as mothers' depressive symptoms increase, their expressions of negative emotion to children increasingly reflect aversion sensitivity and motivation to minimize ongoing stress or discomfort. In multiple interactions over 2 years, negative affect expressed by 319 mothers and their children was observed across variations in mothers' depressive symptoms, the aversiveness of children's immediate behavior, and observed differences in children's general negative reactivity. As expected, depressive symptoms predicted reduced maternal negative reactivity when child behavior was low in aversiveness, particularly with children who were high in negative reactivity. Depressive symptoms predicted high negative reactivity and steep increases in negative reactivity as the aversiveness of child behavior increased, particularly when high and continued aversiveness from the child was expected (i.e., children were high in negative reactivity). The findings are consistent with the proposal that deficits in parenting competence as depressive symptoms increase reflect aversion sensitivity and motivation to avoid conflict and suppress children's aversive behavior.


Subject(s)
Child Behavior/psychology , Child of Impaired Parents/psychology , Depression/psychology , Mother-Child Relations/psychology , Mothers/psychology , Adaptation, Psychological , Adult , Child , Child, Preschool , Emotions , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Motivation , Young Adult
9.
Dev Psychopathol ; 26(1): 111-24, 2014 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24280416

ABSTRACT

This study examined individual differences in how mothers' depressive symptoms affect children's early adjustment. It tested whether problematic development among children high in negative emotionality is accentuated by (a) maternal reactivity, the negative reactivity of mothers with depressive symptoms to difficult child characteristics; and (b) child vulnerability, the susceptibility of negatively emotional children to the negative parenting of mothers with depressive symptoms. Based on 1,364 participants from the NICHD Study of Early Child Care, results showed that mothers' depressive symptoms predicted greater risk for adjustment problems at age 3 among children who as infants were high rather than low in negative emotionality. Increased risk was evident for behavior problems, low responsiveness, high separation distress, and low social competence. Mediational tests suggested that increased risk reflected maternal reactivity: the stronger mothers' depressive symptoms, the more they responded with negative parenting to children high in negative emotionality. The proposal that child vulnerability mediates the greater impact of mothers' depressive symptoms on negatively emotional children was verified only for separation distress. The results support the proposal that, when mothers are high in depressive symptoms, aversive characteristics of children and their behavior increasingly influence early adjustment and do so because they elicit negative parent behavior.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Psychological , Child of Impaired Parents/psychology , Depression/psychology , Emotions , Mother-Child Relations , Mothers/psychology , Social Adjustment , Adolescent , Child , Child Behavior/psychology , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Infant , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Parenting/psychology
10.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry ; 55(5): 495-504, 2014 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24372472

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The depression-inhibition hypothesis suggests that mothers' depressive symptoms undermine development because they lead children to withdraw from social contact. To test this, this study examined whether poor first-grade adjustment among children of mothers with depressive symptoms is mediated by the emergence of child withdrawal in early development. METHOD: Based on 1,364 dyads, four waves of data spanning from 24 months to first grade (7 years) were used to examine paths by which children's withdrawal mediates relations between mothers' early depressive symptoms and three first-grade outcomes: social competence, academic performance, and externalizing behavior problems. RESULTS: Structural equation modeling revealed three principal paths. First, direct relations were observed: Mothers' depressive symptoms predicted early child withdrawal and increases in child withdrawal over time, which predicted poor first-grade adjustment. Second, reciprocal relations were observed: Mothers' depressive symptoms predicted child withdrawal, which predicted increases in depressive symptoms. Third, relations via mother-child mutual responsiveness were observed: Depression-related increases in child withdrawal predicted declines in mutual responsiveness, which predicted poor first-grade adjustment. CONCLUSION: The findings suggest that, due to its interdependence with maternal depression and low mother-child mutual responsiveness over time, child withdrawal may play an important role in the poor first-grade adjustment of children whose mothers are high in depressive symptoms.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Psychological , Child of Impaired Parents/psychology , Depression/psychology , Mothers/psychology , Adult , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Male , Mother-Child Relations/psychology , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Social Isolation/psychology , Social Skills , Transactional Analysis
11.
J Fam Psychol ; 27(6): 884-95, 2013 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24294931

ABSTRACT

This study examined subgroups of depressed mothers who differ on their intrusive and withdrawn behavior. It explored the stability of these differences, why they occur, and their role in children's early developmental risk. With 6- to 24-month data from 1,364 dyads, latent class analysis identified 3 stable patterns of early parenting among mothers consistently above clinical thresholds on depressive symptoms (n = 159): 2 low-functioning patterns (high intrusive, high intrusive/high withdrawn) and 1 high-functioning pattern (low intrusive/low withdrawn). Low-functioning depressed mothers were no more depressed than high-functioning depressed mothers, but lacked personal resources and were in low-support, high-stress contexts. Differences in their children's development over the first 2 years appeared to depend primarily on demographic risk. By 36 months, however, stable differences in depressed mothers' patterns of intrusive and withdrawn parenting-independent of demographic risk-predicted cognitive and language development, the quality of the relationship with the mother (attachment, responsiveness to mothers), and socioemotional competence. Children of high-functioning depressed mothers were not significantly different from children of nondepressed mothers in cognitive and language development and in attachment and responsiveness to the mother, but displayed more behavior problems and less social competence. Findings reveal stable differences in parenting within a sample of depressed mothers, support a stress and coping perspective on why these differences occur, and demonstrate their potential role in determining the risk children of depressed mothers face over the first 3 years.


Subject(s)
Child Development/physiology , Child of Impaired Parents/psychology , Depression/psychology , Mother-Child Relations/psychology , Mothers/psychology , Parenting/psychology , Adult , Child, Preschool , Depression/diagnosis , Female , Humans , Infant , Language Development , Prospective Studies , Risk
12.
Dev Psychopathol ; 24(1): 195-210, 2012 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22293004

ABSTRACT

Vibrant expression of emotion is the principal means infants and young children use to elicit appropriate and timely caregiving, stimulation, and support. This study examined the depression-inhibition hypothesis: that declines in mothers' support as their depressive symptoms increase inhibit children's emotional communication. Ninety-four mothers and their 14- to 27-month-olds interacted in a university playroom. Based on microanalytic coding of discrete facial displays, results supported three components of the hypothesis. (a) As mothers' depressive symptoms increased, children displayed less facial emotion (more flat affect, less joy, less sadness, less negative). (b) Mothers' low emotional and behavioral support predicted children's low facial communication and mediated relations between mothers' depressive symptoms and children's infrequent emotion. (c) Children who were passive with mothers behaviorally expressed emotion infrequently. Children's passivity mediated relations between mothers' depressive symptoms and children's infrequent emotion displays. Contrary to modeling and contagion theories, mothers' facial displays did not mediate relations between their depressive symptoms and children's facial displays. Nor were the outcomes children experienced regulating their facial displays. Rather, findings suggest that, even when depressive symptoms are modest, young children inhibit emotion as mothers' depressive symptoms increase to withdraw from unresponsive mothers, which may adversely affect children's subsequent relationships and competencies.


Subject(s)
Child Behavior/psychology , Depression/psychology , Emotions/physiology , Inhibition, Psychological , Mother-Child Relations , Mothers/psychology , Child, Preschool , Expressed Emotion , Facial Expression , Female , Humans , Infant , Male
13.
J Youth Adolesc ; 41(4): 403-13, 2012 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21409413

ABSTRACT

Why do depressive symptoms increase during adolescence? Because inhibition and poor peer relationships predict adolescents' depressive symptoms concurrently, we hypothesized that adolescents who cope with the stresses of this period by becoming increasingly inhibited may experience increasing depressive symptoms both directly and due to increased difficulty with peers. Longitudinal data from 904 participants, (52% female; 87% Caucasian, 5% Hispanic, 4% African-American, 4.6% other) from the NICHD Study of Early Child Care were examined when youth were in sixth and ninth grades. Path analyses revealed a direct effect of inhibition: Youth who became more inhibited reported increasing depressive symptoms. Indirect effects showed that they also experienced declines in friendship quality and popularity, which in turn led to increases in depressive symptoms. Findings suggest that increasing inhibition as an adaptation to the stresses of adolescence, and particularly its impact on popularity, is a risk factor for increases in depressive symptoms.


Subject(s)
Adolescent Behavior/psychology , Depression/psychology , Adolescent , Child , Female , Friends , Humans , Inhibition, Psychological , Interpersonal Relations , Male , Peer Group , Personality Development , Stress, Psychological
14.
Child Dev ; 78(4): 1204-21, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17650134

ABSTRACT

This study examined reactions of 1-year-olds and young 2-year-olds to being controlled by mothers. Mothers' supportive behavior predicted children's willing compliance. However, contrary to research with older children, defiance was also associated with variables linked to maternal competence, specifically, mothers' supportive behavior, autonomy-granting controls, and low depressive symptoms. At this age high-defiant children initiated positive interaction with mothers more than did low-defiant children. With age, children displayed more willing compliance and more active resistance (defiance, low passivity). However, developmental increases in active resistance were absent when mothers were high in depressive symptoms. Findings are consistent with the proposal that in early development active resistance to parents often reflects children's motivation to control events, not poor parenting or strained parent-child relationships.


Subject(s)
Assertiveness , Cooperative Behavior , Internal-External Control , Personal Autonomy , Personality Development , Attention Deficit and Disruptive Behavior Disorders/psychology , Child, Preschool , Depression/psychology , Female , Humans , Individuation , Infant , Male , Mother-Child Relations , Parenting/psychology , Personality Assessment , Risk Factors , Socialization , Temperament
15.
Dev Psychol ; 40(6): 1212-27, 2004 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15535768

ABSTRACT

This study investigated the maternal concerns and emotions that may regulate one form of sensitive parenting, support for children's immediate desires or intentions. While reviewing a videotape of interactions with their 1-year-olds, mothers who varied on depressive symptoms reported concerns and emotions they had during the interaction. Emotions reflected outcomes either to children (child-oriented concerns) or to mothers themselves (parent-oriented concerns). Child-oriented concerns were associated with fewer negative emotions and more supportive behavior. Supportive parenting was high among mothers who experienced high joy and worry and low anger, sadness, and guilt. However, relations depended on whether emotions were child or parent oriented: Supportive behavior occurred more when emotions were child oriented. In addition, as depressive symptoms increased, mothers reported fewer child-oriented concerns, fewer child-oriented positive emotions, and more parent-oriented negative emotions. They also displayed less supportive behavior. Findings suggest that support for children's immediate intentions may be regulated by parents' concerns, immediate emotions, and depressive symptoms.


Subject(s)
Affect , Mother-Child Relations , Motivation , Parenting , Adult , Depression/psychology , Emotions , Female , Guilt , Humans , Infant , Infant Behavior/psychology , Male , Video Recording
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