Shackman Jessica E, Pollak Seth D
University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Dev Psychopathol. 2014 Nov;26(4 Pt 1):1021-33. doi: 10.1017/S0954579414000546. Epub 2014 Jun 10.
Physically maltreated children are at risk for developing externalizing behavioral problems characterized by reactive aggression. The current experiment tested the relationships between individual differences in a neural index of social information processing, histories of child maltreatment, child negative affect, and aggressive behavior. Fifty boys (17 maltreated) performed an emotion recognition task while the P3b component of the event-related potential was recorded to index attention allocation to angry faces. Children then participated in a peer-directed aggression task. Negative affect was measured by recording facial electromyography, and aggression was indexed by the feedback that children provided to a putative peer. Physically maltreated children exhibited greater negative affect and more aggressive behavior, compared to nonmaltreated children, and this relationship was mediated by children's allocation of attention to angry faces. These data suggest that physical maltreatment leads to inappropriate regulation of both negative affect and aggression, which likely place maltreated children at increased risk for the development and maintenance of externalizing behavior disorders.
遭受身体虐待的儿童有出现以反应性攻击为特征的外化行为问题的风险。当前的实验测试了社会信息处理的神经指标的个体差异、儿童虐待史、儿童消极情绪和攻击行为之间的关系。五十名男孩(17名受虐待)进行了一项情绪识别任务,同时记录事件相关电位的P3b成分,以指示对愤怒面孔的注意力分配。然后,孩子们参与了一项同伴导向的攻击任务。通过记录面部肌电图来测量消极情绪,通过孩子们对假定同伴提供的反馈来衡量攻击行为。与未受虐待的儿童相比,遭受身体虐待的儿童表现出更大的消极情绪和更具攻击性的行为,并且这种关系是由儿童对愤怒面孔的注意力分配所介导的。这些数据表明,身体虐待会导致消极情绪和攻击行为的调节不当,这可能会使受虐待儿童出现和维持外化行为障碍的风险增加。