Oregon Social Learning Center, Eugene, OR 97401, USA.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2010 Jul;51(7):799-808. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-7610.2009.02207.x. Epub 2010 Jan 5.
Increases in externalizing behaviors during the transition to adolescence may put children at risk for developing mental disorders and related problems. Although children's ability to regulate their emotions appears to be a key factor influencing risk for maladjustment, emotion processes during adolescence remain understudied. In this longitudinal study, we examined a multi-level mediational model in which emotion coaching by parents was posited to influence the ability of adolescents to regulate their emotions, which in turn influences their expression of problem behaviors.
We recruited a representative community sample of 244 families with biological sibling pairs comprising a child in late elementary school and a child in middle school. Maternal meta-emotion interviews were coded for mother emotion coaching and adolescent difficulty with anger. Mothers also completed questionnaires on adolescent irritability. Ratings of adolescent problem behaviors were obtained from mother and teacher questionnaires completed at two time points. Using structural equation modeling, constructs were partitioned into components across older and younger siblings to examine shared and nonshared variance and contextual effects.
Cross-sectional data indicated that mothers' emotion coaching of anger was related to better anger regulation in adolescent siblings, which was, in turn related to less externalizing behavior. Although support for mediational effects was limited in the longitudinal data, both older and younger siblings' difficulties in regulating anger predicted adolescent externalizing behavior three years later. Additional longitudinal predictors of externalizing behavior were observed for younger siblings. In particular, emotion coaching of anger by mothers was associated with decreased externalizing behavior, while conversely, older siblings' externalizing behavior was associated with increased externalizing behavior in the younger siblings over time.
The findings highlight the importance of considering family emotion processes in understanding adolescent problem behavior. Both maternal emotion coaching of adolescent anger and adolescent difficulty in regulating anger influenced adolescent externalizing behavior. Emotion coaching interventions seem worthy of consideration for enhancing the impact of prevention and intervention programs targeting youth externalizing behaviors.
青少年期向外界表现行为的增加可能会使儿童面临发展精神障碍和相关问题的风险。尽管儿童调节情绪的能力似乎是影响适应不良风险的关键因素,但青春期的情绪过程仍未得到充分研究。在这项纵向研究中,我们检验了一个多层次的中介模型,其中父母的情绪指导被认为会影响青少年调节情绪的能力,而情绪调节能力又会影响他们表现出问题行为的方式。
我们招募了一个具有代表性的社区样本,其中包括 244 个有生物兄弟姐妹的家庭,其中一个孩子在上小学高年级,另一个孩子在上中学。对母亲的元情绪访谈进行了编码,以确定母亲的情绪指导和青少年的愤怒困难程度。母亲还完成了关于青少年烦躁的问卷。从母亲和教师在两个时间点完成的问卷中获得了青少年问题行为的评分。使用结构方程模型,将构建体划分为年龄较大和较小的兄弟姐妹的组成部分,以检验共享和非共享方差和上下文效应。
横断面数据表明,母亲对愤怒的情绪指导与青少年兄弟姐妹更好的愤怒调节有关,而愤怒调节又与较少的外化行为有关。尽管纵向数据对中介效应的支持有限,但年龄较大和较小的兄弟姐妹在调节愤怒方面的困难都预示着三年后青少年的外化行为。还观察到了年龄较小的兄弟姐妹的其他纵向外化行为预测因素。特别是,母亲对青少年愤怒的情绪指导与减少外化行为有关,而相反,年龄较大的兄弟姐妹的外化行为随着时间的推移与年龄较小的兄弟姐妹的外化行为增加有关。
这些发现强调了考虑家庭情绪过程在理解青少年问题行为中的重要性。母亲对青少年愤怒的情绪指导和青少年调节愤怒的困难程度都影响了青少年的外化行为。情绪指导干预似乎值得考虑,以增强针对青少年外化行为的预防和干预计划的效果。