"Emotional responsiveness" refers to how well someone expresses and connects with their emotions, and how they react to the emotions of others. It means being sensitive and aware of feelings, and being able to appropriately respond with empathy and support.
Full definition
Understanding what each person needs and also what they fear and the importance of
emotional responsiveness in the relationship attachment is the key to building great relationships.
Thus, it is important to assess
whether emotional responsiveness is part of the foundation for feeding responsiveness, especially in the context of deficits in maternal energy - intake regulation.
Therefore, the aim of this study was to examine whether and
how emotional responsiveness influences feeding responsiveness and child weight outcomes, in the context of maternal binge eating (BE) behavior.
No one has ever shown that it was possible to deliberately shape key elements in love relationships —
like emotional responsiveness — or to teach lovers how to change the security of their attachment.
No matter how COMMITTED we are to our primary love relationship, we will have a difficult or even impossible time resisting the loving
emotional responsiveness of another person when we are not getting our emotional needs met in our primary love relationship.
It is safe to say that all developmental scientists
encourage emotional responsiveness on the part of caregivers: The back - and - forth, or serve - and - return, is crucial to brain development, cognitive and emotional development, the stress regulation system, and just authentic human connection.
The irreconcilability of art and theatre was the mainstay of Fried's thought until, rebounding into the 19th century (thinking about the work of such artists as Courbet and Thomas Eakins) and as though searching for a way out of what looked like an increasingly inhibiting formalism, Fried expanded his evaluative criteria and perhaps
even emotional responsiveness to art by including psychoanalytic ideas in his formal assessments.
Mother's
weak emotional responsiveness and frequent use of physical punishment explain the effect of current poverty on mental health, but not the effect of persistent poverty.
Susan Johnson, the founder of Emotionally - focused therapy, suggests that
emotional responsiveness consists of three main components that are outlined by the acronym A.R.E.
Cognitive - affective structures associated with maltreatment may promote emotional constriction or
peculiar emotional responsiveness, interfering with a child's ability to engage successfully with peers.6
However, given the substantial body of research on interconnections between emotion and eating behaviors [17], it is surprising that there has been so little research
exploring emotional responsiveness in the context of feeding in the family system.
Longitudinal analyses allows researchers to identify pathways of risk, and to ascertain whether
emotional responsiveness informs feeding responsiveness, or vice versa.
If the attachment figure gives attentive and
positive emotional responsiveness, the child will build positive mental representations of self and others (Gunnar et al., 1996) and vice-versa.
This program teaches you and your partner how to move away from cycles of conflict,
increase emotional responsiveness, forgive old wounds, and rekindle desire and affection.
In fact, the strategies of alienating parents, which include «spurning, terrorizing, isolating, corrupting or exploiting and
denying emotional responsiveness,» are reportedly extreme measures of psychological maltreatment of children.
Having said that, there have been wars waged between religions claiming «my imaginary friend (God) is better than yours»... I feel like as a reasonable person, I am above that, and I wont get
into emotional responsiveness that can incite anger in others, leading to an unproductive discussion.
In Affect Regulation and the Origin of the Self (1999) he shows that the precise mechanisms by which the infant brain is structured depend on the physiological and
emotional responsiveness of the mother with her child.
«I really think the key of it is
the emotional responsiveness — it's listening to your child and treating your child like a person, and honoring what they're trying to ask for.»
These are the tools that enhance the quintessential principle of attachment parenting,
Emotional Responsiveness.
The attachment parenting philosophy inspired by the Searses and promoted by an organization called Attachment Parenting International is centered on eight principle concepts, especially breastfeeding, co-sleeping, constant contact like baby - wearing, and
emotional responsiveness.
... Newest bits of evidence linking a young child's intelligence with the quality of mothering and the amount of mental stimulation in the home comes from the Journal of Educational of Psychology... Most important elements include the mother's involvement with the child, the verbal and
emotional responsiveness of the mother and the provision of appropriate materials, this research shows.
These children typically come from families with adults who were also insecurely attached to their families, and were thus unable to provide the kind of consistency,
emotional responsiveness, and care that securely attached parents could offer.
Persistent social and emotional disturbance characterized by minimal social and
emotional responsiveness to others, lack of positive affect (i.e. smiling, joking, laughing, etc.) and episodes of unexplained irritability, sadness or fearfulness during non-threatening events.
Due to the lack of
emotional responsiveness and love from their caretakers, children raised by uninvolved parents may have difficulty forming attachments later in life.
These children typically come from families with adults who were also insecurely attached to their families, and were thus unable to provide the kind of consistency,
emotional responsiveness, and care that securely attached parents could offer.
Persistent social and emotional disturbance characterized by minimal social and
emotional responsiveness to others, lack of positive affect (i.e. smiling, joking, laughing, etc.) and episodes of unexplained irritability, sadness or fearfulness during non-threatening events.
When love begins to erode, what is missing is the attunement and
the emotional responsiveness that goes with it.
Long - Term Stability of Individual Differences in
the Emotional Responsiveness of Children with Autism.
Conflict is not the main cause of failed marriages or divorce but rather it is «decreasing affection and
emotional responsiveness.»