Parent-Child Attachment and Children's Experience and Regulation of Emotion: A Meta-Analytic Review

Attachment relationships serve as contexts within which children develop emotional capacities. This meta-analytic review assessed the strength of associations of parent-child attachment patterns with the experience and regulation of emotion in children under age 18 years. In a series of meta-analyse...

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Veröffentlicht in:Emotion (Washington, D.C.) D.C.), 2019-09, Vol.19 (6), p.1103-1126
Hauptverfasser: Cooke, Jessica E, Kochendorfer, Logan B, Stuart-Parrigon, Kaela L, Koehn, Amanda J, Kerns, Kathryn A
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Attachment relationships serve as contexts within which children develop emotional capacities. This meta-analytic review assessed the strength of associations of parent-child attachment patterns with the experience and regulation of emotion in children under age 18 years. In a series of meta-analyses (k = 72 studies, N's ranged from 87 to 9,167), we examined children's positive and negative affective experiences (assessed either globally or elicited in specific contexts), emotion regulation ability, and coping strategies. More securely attached children experienced more global positive affect and less global negative affect, expressed less elicited negative affect, were better able to regulate emotions, and more often used cognitive and social support coping strategies. More avoidantly attached children experienced less global positive affect, were less able to regulate emotions, and were less likely to use cognitive or social support coping strategies. By contrast, more ambivalently attached children experienced more global and more elicited negative affect, and were less able to regulate emotions. More disorganized children experienced less global positive affect and more global negative affect. These robust findings provide evidence that attachments to parents have implications for children's emotional development, although more research is needed on whether insecure attachment patterns are associated with distinct emotion profiles.
ISSN:1528-3542
1931-1516
DOI:10.1037/emo0000504