Literature DB >> 29249892

Toward Developing Laboratory-Based Parent-Adolescent Conflict Discussion Tasks that Consistently Elicit Adolescent Conflict-Related Stress Responses: Support from Physiology and Observed Behavior.

Sarah A Thomas1, Tristan Wilson2, Anjali Jain2, Danielle E Deros2, Miji Um2, Joanna Hurwitz2, Irene Jacobs2, Lindsay Myerberg2, Katherine B Ehrlich3, Emily J Dunn4, Amelia Aldao4, Ryan Stadnik5, Andres De Los Reyes2.   

Abstract

Parent-adolescent conflict poses risk for youth maladjustment. One potential mechanism of this risk is that stress in the form of increased arousal during conflict interactions results in adolescents' impaired decision-making. However, eliciting consistent adolescent stress responses within laboratory-based tasks of parent-adolescent conflict (i.e., conflict discussion tasks) is hindered by task design. This limitation may stem from how conflict topics are assessed and selected for discussion. Within a sample of 47 adolescents (ages 14-17) and parents, we investigated whether a modified version of a conflict discussion task could elicit physiological (i.e., arousal) and behavioral (i.e., hostility) displays of adolescents' conflict-related stress responses. We assessed parent-adolescent conflict via structured interview to identify topics for dyads to discuss during the task. We randomly assigned dyads to complete a 5-minute task to discuss either a putatively benign topic (i.e., control condition) or a conflict topic while undergoing direct assessments of continuous arousal. Trained raters coded dyad members' hostile behavior during the task. Adolescents in the conflict condition exhibited significantly greater levels of arousal than adolescents in the control condition. We observed an interaction between discussion condition and baseline conflict. Specifically, higher baseline conflict predicted greater hostile behavior for adolescents in the conflict condition, yet we observed the inverse relation for adolescents in the control condition. Our modified laboratory discussion task successfully elicited both physiological and behavioral displays of adolescent conflict-related stress. These findings have important implications for leveraging experimental paradigms to understand causal links between parent-adolescent conflict and adolescent psychopathology, and their underlying mechanisms.

Entities:  

Keywords:  To(may)to-To(mah)to Interview; adolescents; hostility; parent-adolescent conflict; psychophysiology

Year:  2017        PMID: 29249892      PMCID: PMC5730341          DOI: 10.1007/s10826-017-0844-z

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Child Fam Stud        ISSN: 1062-1024


  53 in total

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3.  Reconsidering changes in parent-child conflict across adolescence: a meta-analysis.

Authors:  B Laursen; K C Coy; W A Collins
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4.  Criterion validity of interpreting scores from multi-informant statistical interactions as measures of informant discrepancies in psychological assessments of children and adolescents.

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5.  The relationship between parent-child conflict and adolescent antisocial behavior: confirming shared environmental mediation.

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Review 7.  A time of change: behavioral and neural correlates of adolescent sensitivity to appetitive and aversive environmental cues.

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8.  Anxiety and hostility are associated with reduced baroreflex sensitivity and increased beat-to-beat blood pressure variability.

Authors:  Raine Virtanen; Antti Jula; Jouko K Salminen; Liisa-Maria Voipio-Pulkki; Hans Helenius; Tom Kuusela; Juhani Airaksinen
Journal:  Psychosom Med       Date:  2003 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 4.312

9.  Tipping points in adolescent adjustment: predicting social functioning from adolescents' conflict with parents and friends.

Authors:  Katherine B Ehrlich; Matthew J Dykas; Jude Cassidy
Journal:  J Fam Psychol       Date:  2012-09-03

10.  Emotional variability in mother-adolescent conflict interactions and internalizing problems of mothers and adolescents: dyadic and individual processes.

Authors:  Daniëlle Van der Giessen; Tom Hollenstein; William W Hale; Hans M Koot; Wim Meeus; Susan Branje
Journal:  J Abnorm Child Psychol       Date:  2015-02
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  1 in total

1.  A Multi-Method Investigation of Parental Responses to Youth Emotion: Prospective Effects on Emotion Dysregulation and Reactive Aggression in Daily Life.

Authors:  A L Byrd; V Vine; O A Frigoletto; S Vanwoerden; S D Stepp
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  1 in total

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