Feeney Kathleen, Pintos Lobo Rosario, Hare Megan M, Morris Stephanie S J, Laird Angela R, Musser Erica D
Department of Psychology, Florida International University, Miami, FL, USA.
Department of Physics, Florida International University, Miami, FL, USA.
Res Child Adolesc Psychopathol. 2024 Mar;52(3):311-323. doi: 10.1007/s10802-023-01138-w. Epub 2023 Oct 13.
Parental factors, including negative parenting practices (e.g., family conflict, low monitoring), parental depression, and parental substance use, are associated with externalizing behaviors among youth. However, the ways in which these parental factors are associated with youth brain function and consequent externalizing behavior has been less studied. Both the dimensional and stress acceleration models provide frameworks for understanding how parental factors may be associated with frontolimbic and frontoparietal networks implicated in emotional attention and regulation processes. The current review builds upon this work by examining how deprivation- and threat-based parental factors are associated with youth neurocircuitry involved in emotional functioning and externalizing behaviors. A systematic review using PRISMA guidelines was completed and included five studies assessing parenting behaviors, six studies assessing parental depressive symptoms and/or diagnosis, and 12 studies assessing parental history of substance use. Synthesis of reviewed studies discusses support for the dimensional and stress acceleration models within the context of deprivation and threat. Further, a limited number of studies tested (i.e., six studies) and supported (i.e., three studies) youth neural structure and function as a mediator of the association between parental factors and youth externalizing behavior. Specific recommendations for future work include more deliberate planning related to sample composition, improved clarity related to parental constructs, consistency in methodology, and longitudinal study design in order to better understand associations between contextual parental influences and youth neural and behavioral functioning.
父母因素,包括负面的养育方式(如家庭冲突、监管不足)、父母抑郁和父母物质使用,与青少年的外化行为有关。然而,这些父母因素与青少年大脑功能以及随之而来的外化行为之间的关联方式却鲜少被研究。维度模型和压力加速模型都为理解父母因素如何与涉及情绪注意力和调节过程的额边缘叶和额顶叶网络相关联提供了框架。本综述在此基础上展开,探讨基于剥夺和威胁的父母因素如何与参与情绪功能和外化行为的青少年神经回路相关联。我们按照PRISMA指南完成了一项系统综述,纳入了五项评估养育行为的研究、六项评估父母抑郁症状和/或诊断的研究,以及十二项评估父母物质使用史的研究。对所综述研究的综合分析讨论了在剥夺和威胁背景下对维度模型和压力加速模型的支持。此外,有少数研究(即六项研究)对青少年神经结构和功能作为父母因素与青少年外化行为之间关联的中介进行了检验(其中三项研究提供了支持)。对未来工作的具体建议包括更精心地规划样本构成、提高父母构念的清晰度、方法的一致性以及采用纵向研究设计,以便更好地理解情境性父母影响与青少年神经和行为功能之间的关联。