Sentences with phrase «maternal emotional availability»

Maternal emotional availability during infant bedtime: an ecological framework.
Licata M, Zietlow AL, Träuble B, Sodian B, Reck C. Maternal emotional availability and its association with maternal psychopathology, attachment style insecurity and theory of mind.
This study builds upon this work then, by testing child perceptions of maternal emotional availability and their perceptions of social skills as succeeding mediators that explain the link between mother - child depressive symptoms.
Maternal emotional availability and infant pain - related distress.
Mother - infant reengagement following the still - face: The role of maternal emotional availability in infant affect regulation.
Maternal emotional availability at bedtime predicts infant sleep quality.
Maternal emotional availability at bedtime and infant cortisol at 1 and 3 months.
Maternal emotional availability at bedtime and infant cortisol at 1 and 3 months.

Not exact matches

Infancy predictors of emotional availability in middle childhood: the roles of attachment security and maternal depressive symptomatology.
AAI, Adult Attachment Interview; AFFEX, System for Identifying Affect Expression by Holistic Judgement; AIM, Affect Intensity Measure; AMBIANCE, Atypical Maternal Behaviour Instrument for Assessment and Classification; ASCT, Attachment Story Completion Task; BAI, Beck Anxiety Inventory; BDI, Beck Depression Inventory; BEST, Borderline Evaluation of Severity over Time; BPD, borderline personality disorder; BPVS - II, British Picture Vocabulary Scale II; CASQ, Children's Attributional Style Questionnaire; CBCL, Child Behaviour Checklist; CDAS - R, Children's Dysfunctional Attitudes Scale - Revised; CDEQ, Children's Depressive Experiences Questionnaire; CDIB, Child Diagnostic Interview for Borderlines; CGAS, Child Global Assessment Schedule; CRSQ, Children's Response Style Questionnaire; CTQ, Childhood Trauma Questionnaire; CTQ, Childhood Trauma Questionnaire; DASS, Depression, Anxiety, Stress Scales; DERS, Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale; DIB - R, Revised Diagnostic Interview for Borderlines; DSM, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders; EA, Emotional Availability Scales; ECRS, Experiences in Close Relationships Scale; EMBU, Swedish acronym for Own Memories Concerning Upbringing; EPDS, Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale; FES, Family Environment Scale; FSS, Family Satisfaction Scale; FTRI, Family Trauma and Resilience Interview; IBQ - R, Infant Behaviour Questionnaire, Revised; IPPA, Inventory of Parent and Peer Attachment; K - SADS, Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia for School - Age Children; KSADS - E, Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia - Episodic Version; MMD, major depressive disorder; PACOTIS, Parental Cognitions and Conduct Toward the Infant Scale; PPQ, Perceived Parenting Quality Questionnaire; PD, personality disorder; PPVT - III, Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test, Third Edition; PSI - SF, Parenting Stress Index Short Form; RSSC, Reassurance - Seeking Scale for Children; SCID - II, Structured Clinical Interview for DSM - IV; SCL -90-R, Symptom Checklist 90 Revised; SCQ, Social Communication Questionnaire; SEQ, Children's Self - Esteem Questionnaire; SIDP - IV, Structured Interview for DSM - IV Personality; SPPA, Self - Perception Profile for Adolescents; SSAGA, Semi-Structured Assessment for the Genetics of Alcoholism; TCI, Temperament and Character Inventory; YCS, Youth Chronic Stress Interview; YSR, Youth Self - Report.
Parental sensitivity (as measured by, for example, the Ainsworth Sensitivity Scale (ASS)(Ainsworth 1969), Child - Adult Relationship Experimental Index (CARE - Index)(Crittenden 2001), Parental Sensitivity Assessment Scale (PSAS)(Hoff 2004), Coding Interactive Behaviour (CIB)(Feldman 1998), Emotional Availability (EA) Scales (Biringen 2000), Global Ratings Scales of Mother - Infant Interaction (GRS)(Murray 1996), Maternal Behaviour Q - sort (MBQS)(Pederson 1999) or Nursing Child Assessment Teaching Scale (NCATS)(Sumner 1994)-RRB-.
Left untreated, maternal depression leads to long - term depression in the mother, a lack of emotional availability for the baby and detrimental outcomes in the development of the fetus, newborn and developing child.
Negative emotional reactivity and regulation in 12 - month - olds following emotional challenge: Contributions of maternal - Infant emotional availability in a low - income sample.
Maternal depression: Relations with maternal caregiving representations and emotional availability during the preschooMaternal depression: Relations with maternal caregiving representations and emotional availability during the preschoomaternal caregiving representations and emotional availability during the preschool years.
Infancy predictors of emotional availability in middle childhood: The roles of attachment security and maternal depressive symptomatology.
Maternal working model of the child and emotional availability in an sample of aggressive preschoolers.
Quality of mother - child interaction assessed by the Emotional Availability Scale: Associations with maternal psychological well - being, child behavior problems, and child cognitive functioning.Ph.D.
H4: There will be an indirect effect from maternal depressive symptoms to child depressive symptoms through two succeeding mediators: perceived emotional availability and child social skills.
The results showed that maternal depressive symptoms was significantly related to a child's perceptions of their mother's emotional availability.
In support of the final hypothesis, the mediation analysis showed a small indirect effect from maternal depressive symptoms to child depressive symptoms through emotional availability and child social skills.
Therefore, this study proposes that maternal depressive symptoms transfer to adult children through two succeeding mediators: perceived emotional availability of mothers and social skills.
H1: Maternal depressive symptoms is negatively related to child perceptions of emotional availability.
H1 stated that maternal depressive symptomology would be negatively related to child perceptions of emotional availability.
Results showed that maternal depressive symptoms were significantly related to child perceptions of emotional availability.
Results supported H1 as there was a significant negative relationship between maternal depression and child perceptions of emotional availability from their mother (B = -1.06, SE =.24, t = -4.35, p <.001).
At the first stage of assessment self - report questionnaires were administered to examine the presence of maternal psychiatric symptoms (SCL -90-R), perceived social support (MSPSS), and marital adjustment (Dyadic Adjustment Scale); dyadic interactions were observed and rated with the Emotional Availability Scales (Biringen, 2008) at each stage of data collection.
In this study focused on school aged children, we hypothesize that the impact of maternal depressive symptomatology on child social preference is mediated by the quality of mother - child interactions, particularly the emotional availability, warmth, and sensitive - responding of the parent to child.
Results from 54 dyads show that the higher maternal and especially child exposure to political violence and other trauma, the lower their emotional availability in dyadic interactions (r =.40, p <.01).
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