| Literature DB >> 28036091 |
C Cybele Raver1, Amanda L Roy2, Emily Pressler3, Alexandra M Ursache4, Dana Charles McCoy5.
Abstract
The current study examines the additive and joint roles of chronic poverty-related adversity and three candidate neurocognitive processes of emotion regulation (ER)-including: (i) attention bias to threat (ABT); (ii) accuracy of facial emotion appraisal (FEA); and (iii) negative affect (NA)-for low-income, ethnic minority children's internalizing problems (N = 338). Children were enrolled in the current study from publicly funded preschools, with poverty-related adversity assessed at multiple time points from early to middle childhood. Field-based administration of neurocognitively-informed assessments of ABT, FEA and NA as well as parental report of internalizing symptoms were collected when children were ages 8-11, 6 years after baseline. Results suggest that chronic exposure to poverty-related adversity from early to middle childhood predicted higher levels of internalizing symptomatology when children are ages 8-11, even after controlling for initial poverty status and early internalizing symptoms in preschool. Moreover, each of the 3 hypothesized components of ER played an independent and statistically significant role in predicting children's parent-reported internalizing symptoms at the 6-year follow-up, even after controlling for early and chronic poverty-related adversity.Entities:
Keywords: attention bias; emotion regulation; poverty
Year: 2016 PMID: 28036091 PMCID: PMC5371746 DOI: 10.3390/bs7010002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Sci (Basel) ISSN: 2076-328X
Sample descriptive statistics (n = 338).
| Study Variable | |
|---|---|
| Internalizing behavior problems (5th grade) | 1.04 (1.38) |
| Emotion Regulation (5th grade) | |
| ABT | −11.82 (51.71) |
| FEA | 0.89 (0.12) |
| NA | 32.64 (5.10) |
| Chronic exposure to poverty-rel. adversity (centered) | −0.01 (0.54) |
| Child age at baseline (months) | 49.50 (7.24) |
| Child gender (boy) | 46% |
| Child race/ethnicity (African-American) | 70% |
| Child baseline internalizing behavior problems | 3.15 (3.04) |
| Parent age at baseline (years) | 29.72 (7.64) |
Descriptive statistics of parent reported child internalizing behavior problem in middle childhood (n = 338) 1,2.
| Item | “Not True” 0 | “Sometimes True” 1 | “Very/Often True” 2 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % | % | % | ||||
| 1. Is too fearful or anxious. | 64% | 217 | 31% | 106 | 4% | 15 |
| 2. Feels worthless or inferior. | 87% | 294 | 12% | 39 | 1% | 5 |
| 3. Is unhappy, sad, or depressed. | 85% | 288 | 14% | 48 | 1% | 2 |
| 4. Is withdrawn, does not get involved with others. | 89% | 302 | 10% | 34 | 1% | 2 |
| 5. Cries too much. | 81% | 275 | 15% | 49 | 4% | 14 |
1 Of sample with valid information on parent reported BPI and direct assessments of students ER; 2 Contains missing data (about 13% are missing across items), proportions reflect valid data.
Predicting child internalizing behavior problems from poverty-related adversity and three components of ER (n = 338).
| Predictor | Model 1 | Model 2 |
|---|---|---|
| Coeff. (SE) | Coeff. (SE) | |
| Emotion regulation | ||
| ABT | −0.03 (0.01) * | −0.03 (0.01) |
| FEA | −0.05 (0.02) ** | −0.05 (0.02) ** |
| NA | 0.05 (0.01) *** | 0.05 (0.01) *** |
| Chronic poverty-related adversity | 0.09 (0.03) ** | 0.10 (0.03) ** |
| Interactions | ||
| ABT X Chronic adversity | --- | −0.05 (0.03) |
| FEA X Chronic adversity | --- | −0.01 (0.03) |
| NA X Chronic adversity | --- | 0.02 (0.11) |
| Covariates | ||
| Child age baseline (months) | −0.00 (0.00) | −0.00 (0.00) |
| Child gender (boy) | −0.03 (0.03) | −0.03 (0.03) |
| Child race/ethnicity | ||
| African American | −0.10 (0.03) ** | −0.10 (0.03) ** |
| Parent age baseline (years) | 0.00 (0.00) | 0.00 (0.00) |
| Child baseline internalizing behavior | 0.04 (0.01) ** | 0.04 (0.01) ** |
| Baseline income-to-needs ratio (reversed) | −0.06 (0.03) | −0.06 (0.03) |
| 0.47 (0.10) *** | 0.46 (0.10) *** |
Note. OLS regression coefficients and standard errors presented above, * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001.