Dunbar Angel S, Zeytinoglu Selin, Leerkes Esther M
African American Studies Department, College of Behavioral and Social Sciences, University of Maryland, 4280 Chapel Lane, College Park, MD, 20742, US.
Human Development and Quantitative Methodology Department, University of Maryland, College Park, US.
Res Child Adolesc Psychopathol. 2022 Feb;50(2):163-176. doi: 10.1007/s10802-021-00779-z. Epub 2021 Feb 13.
Research demonstrates that Black parents attempt to suppress children's expressions of negative emotions (e.g., anger, fear), in part, to protect them from experiencing racial bias from authority figures. The goal of this study was to examine whether the effectiveness of parental suppression strategies in reducing behavior problems depends on whether parents talk to children about the potential of experiencing racism (i.e., preparation for bias) and children's resting cardiac vagal tone as indexed by baseline respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA). Ninety-four parents (97% mothers) who identified their child as Black (56% girls) completed questionnaires about their punitive and minimizing responses to their child's negative emotions and their child's internalizing and externalizing problems at ages 5 and 6. Children's baseline RSA was assessed at age 5. Results indicated that parents' suppression of children's negative emotions predicted decreased externalizing behaviors (e.g., acting out) only when parents talked to their children about racism. When parents did not contextualize their restrictions on children's emotional expressions with discussions about race, children with higher baseline RSA demonstrated increased externalizing behaviors, whereas those with lower baseline RSA were unaffected. Parental suppression strategies led to increased internalizing symptoms (e.g., anxiety, withdrawal) among children with higher baseline RSA regardless of whether parents discussed racism. Black parents face a conundrum in which suppressing their children's negative emotions, in hopes of subverting racism, may reduce their children's externalizing problems under some circumstances, but may increase the risk of their children developing internalizing problems. Implications for systemic policy change to combat racism are discussed.
研究表明,黑人父母试图抑制孩子负面情绪的表达(如愤怒、恐惧),部分原因是为了保护他们免受权威人物的种族偏见。本研究的目的是检验父母的抑制策略在减少行为问题方面的有效性是否取决于父母是否与孩子谈论经历种族主义的可能性(即对偏见的准备)以及孩子静息时的心脏迷走神经张力,以基线呼吸性窦性心律不齐(RSA)为指标。94名将孩子认定为黑人的父母(97%为母亲)(56%为女孩)完成了关于他们对孩子负面情绪的惩罚性和最小化反应以及孩子在5岁和6岁时内化和外化问题的问卷。在孩子5岁时评估其基线RSA。结果表明,只有当父母与孩子谈论种族主义时,父母对孩子负面情绪的抑制才预示着外化行为(如行为失控)的减少。当父母没有通过关于种族的讨论来解释他们对孩子情绪表达的限制时,基线RSA较高的孩子外化行为增加,而基线RSA较低的孩子则不受影响。无论父母是否讨论种族主义,父母的抑制策略都会导致基线RSA较高的孩子内化症状(如焦虑、退缩)增加。黑人父母面临一个难题,即抑制孩子的负面情绪,希望颠覆种族主义,在某些情况下可能会减少孩子的外化问题,但可能会增加孩子出现内化问题的风险。文中讨论了系统性政策变革以对抗种族主义的意义。