Keyword search (3,448 papers available)


Parental socialization, vagal regulation, and preschoolers' anxious difficulties: direct mothers and moderated fathers.

Author(s): Hastings PD, Sullivan C, McShane KE, Coplan RJ, Utendale WT, Vyncke JD

Child Dev. 2008 Jan-Feb;79(1):45-64 Authors: Hastings PD, Sullivan C, McShane KE, Coplan RJ, Utendale WT, Vyncke JD

Article GUID: 18269508


Title:Parental socialization, vagal regulation, and preschoolers' anxious difficulties: direct mothers and moderated fathers.
Authors:Hastings PDSullivan CMcShane KECoplan RJUtendale WTVyncke JD
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18269508?dopt=Abstract
Category:Child Dev
PMID:18269508
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 Centre for Research in Human Development, Department of Psychology, Concordia University, 7141 Sherbrooke Street West, Montréal, Quebec, Canada H4B 1R6. paul.hastings@concordia.ca

Description:

Parental socialization, vagal regulation, and preschoolers' anxious difficulties: direct mothers and moderated fathers.

Child Dev. 2008 Jan-Feb;79(1):45-64

Authors: Hastings PD, Sullivan C, McShane KE, Coplan RJ, Utendale WT, Vyncke JD

Abstract

Parental supportiveness and protective overcontrol and preschoolers' parasympathetic regulation were examined as predictors of temperamental inhibition, social wariness, and internalizing problems. Lower baseline vagal tone and weaker vagal suppression were expected to mark poorer dispositional self-regulatory capacity, leaving children more susceptible to the influence of parental socialization. Less supportive mothers had preschoolers with more internalizing problems. One interaction between baseline vagal tone and maternal protective overcontrol, predicting social wariness, conformed to the moderation hypothesis. Conversely, vagal suppression moderated several links between paternal socialization and children's anxious difficulties in the expected pattern. There were more links between mothers' self-reported parenting and child outcomes than were noted for direct observations of maternal behavior, whereas the opposite tended to be true for fathers.

PMID: 18269508 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]