Maternal Depressive Symptoms Predict Girls’ but Not Boys’ Emotion Regulation: A Prospective Moment-to-Moment Observation Study

We aimed to further the understanding of maternal depressive symptoms on temporal dynamics of child emotion regulation by applying the process model of emotion regulation to preschoolers and incorporating insights from children’s moment-to-moment emotional expressions. Following 108 mother–child dya...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of abnormal child psychology 2021-09, Vol.49 (9), p.1227-1240
Hauptverfasser: Yan, Jia (Julia), Feng, Xin, Shoppe-Sullivan, Sarah J., Gerhardt, Micah, Wu, Qiong
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container_issue 9
container_start_page 1227
container_title Journal of abnormal child psychology
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creator Yan, Jia (Julia)
Feng, Xin
Shoppe-Sullivan, Sarah J.
Gerhardt, Micah
Wu, Qiong
description We aimed to further the understanding of maternal depressive symptoms on temporal dynamics of child emotion regulation by applying the process model of emotion regulation to preschoolers and incorporating insights from children’s moment-to-moment emotional expressions. Following 108 mother–child dyads (57 girls; 72 mothers identified as White, 23 mothers as Black or African American, 10 mothers as multi-racial, 3 mothers did not report their race) from child age three (T1; M child age  = 3.23; SD  = 0.19) to four years old (T2; M age  = 4.21; SD  = 0.15), we asked whether T1 maternal depressive symptoms predicted T2 boys' and girls' faster transitions into and slower transitions out of negative emotion displays when children were frustrated. The results from multilevel Cox Regression models for latencies and durations of emotion displays showed that child gender moderated the associations between maternal depressive symptoms and latencies of child emotion displays for sadness but not anger. Higher levels of maternal depressive symptoms predicted faster transitions into sadness only for girls but not for boys. The findings suggested that girls of mother with elevated depressive symptoms showed impairment in antecedent-focused emotion regulation of sadness.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s10802-021-00806-z
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); SpringerLink Journals
subjects African Americans
Behavioral Science and Psychology
Child and School Psychology
Children & youth
Emotional regulation
Females
Males
Maternal depression
Mental depression
Mothers
Neurosciences
Preschool children
Psychology
Public Health
Race
Sadness
title Maternal Depressive Symptoms Predict Girls’ but Not Boys’ Emotion Regulation: A Prospective Moment-to-Moment Observation Study
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