Literature DB >> 28348456

Positively Biased Processing of Mother's Emotions Predicts Children's Social and Emotional Functioning.

Meghan Rose Donohue1, Sherryl H Goodman2, Erin C Tully3.   

Abstract

Risk for internalizing problems and social skills deficits likely emerges in early childhood when emotion processing and social competencies are developing. Positively biased processing of social information is typical during early childhood and may be protective against poorer psychosocial outcomes. We tested the hypothesis that young children with relatively less positively biased attention to, interpretations of, and attributions for their mother's emotions would exhibit poorer prosocial skills and more internalizing problems. A sample of 4- to 6-year-old children (N=82) observed their mothers express happiness, sadness and anger during a simulated emotional phone conversation. Children's attention to their mother when she expressed each emotion was rated from video. Immediately following the phone conversation, children were asked questions about the conversation to assess their interpretations of the intensity of mother's emotions and misattributions of personal responsibility for her emotions. Children's prosocial skills and internalizing problems were assessed using mother-report rating scales. Interpretations of mother's positive emotions as relatively less intense than her negative emotions, misattributions of personal responsibility for her negative emotions, and lack of misattributions of personal responsibility for her positive emotions were associated with poorer prosocial skills. Children who attended relatively less to mother's positive than her negative emotions had higher levels of internalizing problems. These findings suggest that children's attention to, interpretations of, and attributions for their mother's emotions may be important targets of early interventions for preventing prosocial skills deficits and internalizing problems.

Entities:  

Keywords:  emotion processing; internalizing problems; mother-child relationship; positivity bias; prosocial skills

Year:  2016        PMID: 28348456      PMCID: PMC5365080          DOI: 10.1016/j.ecresq.2016.08.006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Early Child Res Q        ISSN: 0885-2006


  40 in total

1.  A closer look at preschoolers' freely produced labels for facial expressions.

Authors:  Sherri C Widen; James A Russell
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2003-01

2.  Relations among mothers' expressivity, children's effortful control, and their problem behaviors: a four-year longitudinal study.

Authors:  Carlos Valiente; Nancy Eisenberg; Tracy L Spinrad; Mark Reiser; Amanda Cumberland; Sandra H Losoya; Jeffrey Liew
Journal:  Emotion       Date:  2006-08

3.  Measuring children's perceptions of their mother's depression: the Children's Perceptions of Others' Depression Scale-Mother Version.

Authors:  Sherryl H Goodman; Erin Tully; Arin M Connell; Corey L Hartman; Myoyeon Huh
Journal:  J Fam Psychol       Date:  2011-04

Review 4.  Cognition and depression: current status and future directions.

Authors:  Ian H Gotlib; Jutta Joormann
Journal:  Annu Rev Clin Psychol       Date:  2010       Impact factor: 18.561

5.  Pathways between profiles of family functioning, child security in the interparental subsystem, and child psychological problems.

Authors:  Patrick T Davies; E Mark Cummings; Marcia A Winter
Journal:  Dev Psychopathol       Date:  2004

6.  Does processing of emotional stimuli predict symptomatic improvement and diagnostic recovery from major depression?

Authors:  Sheri L Johnson; Jutta Joormann; Ian H Gotlib
Journal:  Emotion       Date:  2007-02

7.  The development of emotion-processing in children: effects of age, emotion, and intensity.

Authors:  Catherine M Herba; Sabine Landau; Tamara Russell; Christine Ecker; Mary L Phillips
Journal:  J Child Psychol Psychiatry       Date:  2006-11       Impact factor: 8.982

8.  Attention bias toward threat in pediatric anxiety disorders.

Authors:  Amy Krain Roy; Roma A Vasa; Maggie Bruck; Karin Mogg; Brendan P Bradley; Michael Sweeney; R Lindsey Bergman; Erin B McClure-Tone; Daniel S Pine
Journal:  J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry       Date:  2008-10       Impact factor: 8.829

9.  Facial emotion expression recognition by children at familial risk for depression: high-risk boys are oversensitive to sadness.

Authors:  Nestor L Lopez-Duran; Kate R Kuhlman; Charles George; Maria Kovacs
Journal:  J Child Psychol Psychiatry       Date:  2012-10-29       Impact factor: 8.982

10.  Social information processing in aggressive and depressed children.

Authors:  N L Quiggle; J Garber; W F Panak; K A Dodge
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  1992-12
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