Osborne Kimberly, Duprey Erinn, Caughy Margaret O'Brien, Oshri Assaf
Department of Human Development and Family Science, University of Georgia, 114 Dawson Hall, 305 Sanford Drive, Athens, GA 30602, USA.
Center for the Study and Prevention of Suicide, Department of Psychiatry, University of Rochester Medical Center, 601 Elmwood Avenue, Rochester, NY 14642, USA.
J Psychopathol Behav Assess. 2021 Dec;43(4):717-729. doi: 10.1007/s10862-021-09881-4. Epub 2021 Apr 12.
Parents with childhood maltreatment histories are at risk for emotion regulation (ER) problems, which are associated with reduced self-regulation among their offspring. However, gaps remain in the literature regarding this indirect transmission pathway. First, ER consists of multiple dimensions and it is unclear which dimension is most affected by childhood maltreatment. Second, less is known regarding which parental ER dimension is linked to offspring self-regulation. Thus, the present study aimed to examine the direct and indirect associations between parental maltreatment histories and child self-regulatory capacity via dimensions of parental ER.
In this cross-sectional study, 101 youth (75% African American/Black; 53% female; = 10.28; = 1.19) and their primary caregivers were recruited from a low-income community in the Southeastern United States. Structural equation modeling was used to model the effect of parents' self-reported childhood maltreatment on youth physiological self-regulation (measured by heart rate variability reactivity [HRV-R]), via parents' self-reported ER.
Parental maltreatment history was significantly associated with five of the six components of ER. Further, the indirect effect of parents' childhood maltreatment on child HRV-R was significant when parents reported more difficulty engaging goal-directed behaviors. Moderation analyses by sex showed that daughters had greater dysregulation regardless of parental maltreatment histories, while parents' ER was found to play a more significant role in the intergenerational transmission of dysregulation to sons.
The current study extends the literature on self-regulation development in children of low-income, maltreatment-exposed parents. Our study may inform parent-child interventions for improving self-regulation.
有童年虐待经历的父母存在情绪调节(ER)问题的风险,这与他们后代的自我调节能力下降有关。然而,关于这种间接传播途径的文献仍存在空白。首先,情绪调节由多个维度组成,目前尚不清楚哪个维度受童年虐待的影响最大。其次,关于父母情绪调节的哪个维度与后代的自我调节有关,我们了解得较少。因此,本研究旨在通过父母情绪调节的维度来检验父母虐待史与儿童自我调节能力之间的直接和间接关联。
在这项横断面研究中,从美国东南部的一个低收入社区招募了101名青少年(75%为非裔美国人/黑人;53%为女性;平均年龄 = 10.28岁;标准差 = 1.19)及其主要照顾者。采用结构方程模型来模拟父母自我报告的童年虐待对青少年生理自我调节(通过心率变异性反应性[HRV-R]测量)的影响,该影响通过父母自我报告的情绪调节来介导。
父母的虐待史与情绪调节六个组成部分中的五个显著相关。此外,当父母报告在进行目标导向行为时遇到更多困难时,父母童年虐待对儿童HRV-R的间接影响显著。按性别进行的调节分析表明,无论父母的虐待史如何,女儿的调节障碍都更大,而父母的情绪调节在调节障碍向儿子的代际传递中发挥了更重要的作用。
本研究扩展了关于低收入、有虐待经历父母的子女自我调节发展的文献。我们的研究可能为改善自我调节的亲子干预提供参考。