La Barrie Dominique L, Zegarac Miriam, Mekawi Yara, Kuzyk Eva, Stenson Anais F, Jovanovic Tanja, Bradley Bekh, Powers Abigail
Department of Psychology.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences.
Psychol Trauma. 2022 May 26. doi: 10.1037/tra0001265.
African Americans living in low-income urban environments are disproportionately exposed to violence compared to other racial groups. Child exposure to community violence is linked to adverse psychological outcomes, including externalizing and internalizing behaviors. Emotion dysregulation may be one psychological process through which externalizing and internalizing behaviors develop in the context of childhood violence exposure. However, limited research exists on how different aspects of emotion dysregulation are affected by community violence exposure in children.
The present study examined whether violence exposure was indirectly associated with externalizing and internalizing behaviors via facets of emotion dysregulation in a sample of 94 African American mother-child dyads. Mothers and children completed measures to assess child community violence exposure, externalizing and internalizing behaviors, and emotion dysregulation (anger, sadness, and worry dysregulation).
Results indicated that maternal report of child community violence exposure was indirectly associated with externalizing behaviors via anger dysregulation and internalizing behaviors via worry dysregulation. Child report of community violence exposure was also indirectly associated with externalizing behavior via anger dysregulation; however, there were no significant associations with internalizing behavior.
These findings suggest that certain components of emotion dysregulation serve as an indirect pathway of influence for community violence exposure on child behavior, and the pathways differ between externalizing and internalizing behavior outcomes. Emotion dysregulation may serve as an important potential treatment target in reducing long-term risks associated with violence exposure in urban communities of color. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
与其他种族群体相比,生活在低收入城市环境中的非裔美国人遭受暴力的比例更高。儿童接触社区暴力与不良心理后果有关,包括外化行为和内化行为。情绪失调可能是儿童期暴力暴露情况下外化行为和内化行为产生的一种心理过程。然而,关于情绪失调的不同方面如何受到儿童社区暴力暴露的影响,现有研究有限。
本研究在94对非裔美国母子样本中,考察暴力暴露是否通过情绪失调的多个方面与外化行为和内化行为间接相关。母亲和孩子完成了相关测量,以评估儿童社区暴力暴露、外化行为和内化行为以及情绪失调(愤怒、悲伤和担忧失调)。
结果表明,母亲报告的儿童社区暴力暴露通过愤怒失调与外化行为间接相关,通过担忧失调与内化行为间接相关。儿童报告的社区暴力暴露也通过愤怒失调与外化行为间接相关;然而,与内化行为没有显著关联。
这些发现表明,情绪失调的某些成分是社区暴力暴露影响儿童行为的间接途径,并且外化行为和内化行为结果的途径有所不同。情绪失调可能是降低有色人种城市社区暴力暴露相关长期风险的一个重要潜在治疗靶点。(《心理学文摘数据库记录》(c)2022美国心理学会,保留所有权利)