Department of Human Development and Family Studies.
Department of Psychology.
J Fam Psychol. 2023 Feb;37(1):110-120. doi: 10.1037/fam0001017. Epub 2022 Jul 21.
Research has recognized that parental emotion regulation influences whether parents respond sensitively to their children in challenging parenting situations. However, parental emotion regulation is usually assessed using questionnaires that are not about parenting, rather than through examining parents' reaction to specific parenting situations that might evoke negative emotions. This study investigates individual differences in mothers' emotion regulation during parenting, specifically examining the relation between their subjective negative emotions and observed parenting behaviors and whether this relation is moderated by cognitive (strategies to manage negative emotions) and physiological (resting baseline and reactivity of respiratory sinus arrhythmia; RSA) processes. Data of 157 mothers' self-reported negative emotions and strategy-use, their RSA, observed maternal responsiveness, and their preschool-age children's (30-60 months, 49.7% female) challenging behaviors were collected during a Wait Task, in which mothers told children to wait before opening an appealing gift. Regression analysis indicated that, after controlling for how challenging children were, mothers' level of negative emotion was not associated with observed level of maternal responsiveness. In line with hypotheses, the association was moderated by mothers' resting RSA and the extent to which they suppressed negative emotions. However, contrary to hypotheses, the association was not moderated by use of reappraisal, distraction, or rumination, or RSA reactivity. The significant findings suggest that, although mothers' subjective experiences of negative emotions are not necessarily related to less responsive parenting behaviors, the link between maternal emotions and parenting behavior may indicate differences in how mothers engage cognitive strategies as well as their physiological regulation capacity. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
研究已经认识到,父母的情绪调节会影响他们在具有挑战性的育儿情境中对孩子的敏感反应。然而,父母的情绪调节通常是通过使用与育儿无关的问卷来评估的,而不是通过检查父母对可能引发负面情绪的特定育儿情境的反应来评估。本研究调查了母亲在育儿过程中情绪调节的个体差异,具体研究了她们的主观负面情绪与观察到的育儿行为之间的关系,以及这种关系是否受到认知(管理负面情绪的策略)和生理(静息基础和呼吸窦性心律失常反应性;RSA)过程的调节。在等待任务中收集了 157 位母亲的自我报告的负面情绪和策略使用、她们的 RSA、观察到的母亲反应性以及她们 30-60 个月大(49.7%为女性)的学龄前儿童的挑战性行为的数据。在等待任务中,母亲告诉孩子在打开有吸引力的礼物之前等待。回归分析表明,在控制孩子的挑战性程度后,母亲的负面情绪水平与观察到的母亲反应性水平没有关联。与假设一致,这种关联受到母亲静息 RSA 和她们抑制负面情绪程度的调节。然而,与假设相反,这种关联不受再评价、分心或沉思,或 RSA 反应性的调节。这些显著的发现表明,尽管母亲主观体验到的负面情绪不一定与反应性较低的育儿行为有关,但母亲情绪和育儿行为之间的联系可能表明母亲在使用认知策略以及生理调节能力方面存在差异。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2023 APA,保留所有权利)。