| Literature DB >> 27594200 |
Alison L Miller1,2, Ju-Hyun Song1,3, Julie Sturza1, Julie C Lumeng1,4,5, Katherine Rosenblum1,6, Niko Kaciroti1,7, Delia M Vazquez1,5,6.
Abstract
Biological and social influences both shape emotion regulation. In 380 low-income children, we tested whether biological stress profile (cortisol) moderated the association among positive and negative home environment factors (routines; chaos) and emotion regulation (negative lability; positive regulation). Children (M age = 50.6, SD = 6.4 months) provided saliva samples to assess diurnal cortisol parameters across 3 days. Parents reported on home environment and child emotion regulation. Structural equation modeling was used to test whether cortisol parameters moderated associations between home environment and child emotion regulation. Results showed that home chaos was negatively associated with emotion regulation outcomes; cortisol did not moderate the association. Child cortisol level moderated the routines-emotion regulation association such that lack of routine was most strongly associated with poor emotion regulation among children with lower cortisol output. Findings suggest that underlying child stress biology may shape response to environmental influences.Entities:
Keywords: diurnal cortisol; emotion regulation; family routine; home chaos
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27594200 PMCID: PMC5788024 DOI: 10.1002/dev.21471
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Psychobiol ISSN: 0012-1630 Impact factor: 3.038