Parent emotion regulation socializes children's adaptive physiological regulation

This study examined whether parents’ physiological and emotion regulation abilities corresponded to children's physiological and emotional responding to a structured laboratory‐based disappointment task. Ninety‐seven 3‐ to 7‐year‐olds (56 girls; M = 5.79 years) and one parent participated in a multi‐method assessment of parents’ and children's regulatory functioning. Direct (coaching children to use reappraisal) and indirect (resting physiology, dispositional use of reappraisal) aspects of parents’ regulatory abilities were assessed. As expected, an adaptive pattern of parent regulatory abilities composed of higher resting respiratory sinus arrhythmia, use of reappraisal, and coaching reappraisal was associated with children's physiological reactivity after a disappointment indicative of more effective physiological calming in a recovery context (increased parasympathetic activation). In contrast, parents’ regulatory abilities did not relate to changes in children's expressions of emotional distress.
Source: Developmental Psychobiology - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Tags: BRIEF REPORT Source Type: research