| Literature DB >> 28458616 |
Erika Lunkenheimer1, Christine J Kemp1, Rachel G Lucas-Thompson1, Pamela M Cole2, Erin C Albrecht1.
Abstract
Researchers have argued for more dynamic and contextually relevant measures of regulatory processes in interpersonal interactions. In response, we introduce and examine the effectiveness of a new task, the Parent-Child Challenge Task, designed to assess the self-regulation and coregulation of affect, goal-directed behavior, and physiology in parents and their preschoolers in response to an experimental perturbation. Concurrent and predictive validity was examined via relations with children's externalizing behaviors. Mothers used only their words to guide their 3-year-old children to complete increasingly difficult puzzles in order to win a prize (N = 96). A challenge condition was initiated mid-way through the task with a newly introduced time limit. The challenge produced decreases in parental teaching and dyadic behavioral variability and increases in child negative affect and dyadic affective variability, measured by dynamic systems-based methods. Children rated lower on externalizing showed respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) suppression in response to challenge, whereas those rated higher on externalizing showed RSA augmentation. Additionally, select task changes in affect, behavior, and physiology predicted teacher-rated externalizing behaviors four months later. Findings indicate the Parent-Child Challenge Task was effective in producing regulatory changes and suggest its utility in assessing biobehavioral self-regulation and coregulation in parents and their preschoolers.Entities:
Keywords: coregulation; dyadic methods; externalizing behavior problems; parent-child interaction; respiratory sinus arrhythmia; self-regulation
Year: 2016 PMID: 28458616 PMCID: PMC5404237 DOI: 10.1002/icd.1965
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infant Child Dev ISSN: 1522-7219