Emotion Socialization in Anxious Youth: Parenting Buffers Emotional Reactivity to Peer Negative Events

被引:0
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作者
Caroline W. Oppenheimer
Cecile D. Ladouceur
Jennifer M. Waller
Neal D. Ryan
Kristy Benoit Allen
Lisa Sheeber
Erika E. Forbes
Ronald E. Dahl
Jennifer S. Silk
机构
[1] University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine,Department of Psychiatry
[2] University of Pittsburgh,Department of Psychology
[3] Oregon Research Institute,School of Public Health
[4] University of California,undefined
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关键词
Child and adolescent anxiety; Parenting; Emotional reactivity; Peer negative events;
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摘要
Anxious youth exhibit heightened emotional reactivity, particularly to social-evaluative threat, such as peer evaluation and feedback, compared to non-anxious youth. Moreover, normative developmental changes during the transition into adolescence may exacerbate emotional reactivity to peer negative events, particularly for anxious youth. Therefore, it is important to investigate factors that may buffer emotional reactivity within peer contexts among anxious youth. The current study examined the role of parenting behaviors in child emotional reactivity to peer and non-peer negative events among 86 anxious youth in middle childhood to adolescence (Mean age = 11.29, 54 % girls). Parenting behavior and affect was observed during a social-evaluative laboratory speech task for youth, and ecological momentary assessment (EMA) methods were used to examine youth emotional reactivity to typical daily negative events within peer and non-peer contexts. Results showed that parent positive behaviors, and low levels of parent anxious affect, during the stressful laboratory task for youth buffered youth negative emotional reactivity to real-world negative peer events, but not non-peer events. Findings inform our understanding of parenting influences on anxious youth’s emotional reactivity to developmentally salient negative events during the transition into adolescence.
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页码:1267 / 1278
页数:11
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