The role of
child negative affectivity and serotonin transporter linked polymorphic region (5 - HTTLPR) genotype.
Mothers» and fathers» awareness of their own and of their children's emotions and coaching child emotions were indirectly related to child externalising and internalising problems through
child negative affectivity and effortful control, and awareness was also directly related to the child's externalising and internalising problems.
Not exact matches
The Effect of Natural Disaster Experiences and
Children's
Negative Affectivity on
Children's Responses toward Natural Disasters: Focusing on Experiences of the Gyeongju Earthquake.
Relations of positive and
negative affectivity to anxiety and depression in
children: Evidence from a latent variable longtudinal study.
Self - report measures included the Revised
Children's Manifest Anxiety Scale (RCMAS), the Coping Questionnaire, the
Children's
Negative Affectivity Self - Statement Questionnaire, and the
Children's Depression Inventory (CDI).
Second, relations between the broad temperament dimensions (
negative affectivity, surgency, and effortful control) and externalizing and internalizing problem behaviors were examined and compared between clinically referred and general population
children by using multigroup path analyses in M - plus 6.11 [34].
Negative Affectivity and Effortful Control in Mothers With Borderline Personality Disorder and in Their Young
Children.
Simultaneously,
negative affectivity was positively related to the
child's externalising and internalising problems and effortful control was negatively related to the
child's externalising and internalising problems.
Regarding the fine - grained temperament traits, within the dimension
negative affectivity, differences were found between the groups only in soothability: the referred
children had more difficulty to recover from distress than the general population
children.
Ključne riječi parental meta - emotion;
negative affectivity; effortful control;
child externalising and internalising problems
The first two dimensions,
negative affectivity and surgency, represent the tendency of
children to react with either
negative or positive emotions to daily situations.
We expected that referred
children display higher levels of
negative affectivity and lower levels of effortful control (and related fine - grained traits) than general population
children.
In a small clinically referred sample of preschool
children, high levels of
negative affectivity were found to be associated with symptoms of anxiety, reflecting internalizing problems [29], but no comparison was made with general population
children.
The interactions between effortful control and
negative affectivity were included in order to examine the role of effortful control as a possible moderator of the relation between
negative affectivity and
child problem behavior.
Unexpectedly, the referred
children did not significantly differ from the general population group in the tendency to react with
negative emotions to daily situations, as shown by similar levels of
negative affectivity.
In young
children, age three through seven, three broad temperament dimensions have been identified by Rothbart and colleagues:
negative affectivity, extraversion / surgency and effortful control [13, 14].
Results showed that more
negative affectivity and less effortful control may well be temperament traits that vary across a continuum and in extreme levels represent psychopathology in young
children.
Children high in negative affectivity respond more readily with fear, sadness and / or anger and frustration in situations, while children with high surgency are inclined to express laughter, impulsivity, activity and a
Children high in
negative affectivity respond more readily with fear, sadness and / or anger and frustration in situations, while
children with high surgency are inclined to express laughter, impulsivity, activity and a
children with high surgency are inclined to express laughter, impulsivity, activity and approach.
It is likely that there are common characteristics shared by mothers at high risk for depression and their
children, especially those involving
negative affectivity or self regulatory abilities, which might affect the quality of peer relationships (Silberg and Rutter 2002).
Young
children's behavioral inhibition mediates the association between maternal
negative affectivity and internalizing problems.